Hello Garth, I've tried to repeat your explanation and have used two tori symmetrical but without success (f.e. x,y,z-axis + and -50 aso.). Please could you explain what you mean with "use two tori separated enough to avoid the repelling zones"? Thank you and regards
Kaspar
When the torus creates these crosses with holes in the middle it usually means you can move the torus in the direction it's facing, which is Z in this case, and see the cross divide into two curves that miss the center. But the result is not as symmetric. So if you moved the torus say 5 units to get clear of the center, just clone it and move the clone back to be 5 units the other way from where it started (this is easiest if it was at 0 to begin with). (For anyone trying this example, the torus is hidden so it helps to unhide it before adjusting positions.) Here's the example:
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And here is Georjulia
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Super, thank you so much for this amazing idea!!
Regards Kaspar