Great disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron

The great disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron, or gidpith, also commonly called the omnitruncated tesseract, is a convex uniform polychoron that consists of 32 hexagonal prisms, 24 octagonal prisms, 16 truncated octahedra, and 8 great rhombicuboctahedra. 1 of each type of cell join at each vertex. It is the omnitruncate of the BC4 family of uniform polychora and could also be considered to be the omnitruncated hexadecachoron.

The great disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron can be vertex-inscribed into a prismatorhombated icositetrachoron.

This polychoron can be alternated into an omnisnub tesseract, although it cannot be made uniform. The octagons can also be alternated into long rectangles to create a pyritosnub tesseract, which is also nonuniform. If the octagons are alternated alternately, then the resulting polychoron is a truncated icositetrachoron.

Vertex coordinates
Vertex coordinates for a great disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron of edge length 1 are given by all permutations of:
 * (±(1+3$\sqrt{2}$)/2, ±(1+2$\sqrt{3}$)/2, ±(1+$\sqrt{2+√2}$)/2, ±1/2).

Representations
A great disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron has the following Coxeter diagrams:
 * x4x3x3x (full symmetry)
 * xxxwwxxx4xxuxxuxx3xuxxxxux&#xt (BC3 axial, great rhombicuboctahedron-first)
 * wx3xx3xw *b3xx&#zx (D4 symmetry)

Related polychora
A great disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron can be augmented by joining truncated octahedron atop great rhombicuboctahedron segmentochora to its great rhombicuboctahedral cells. If all eight great rhombicuboctahedra are augmented, the result is the prismatorhombated icositetrachoron, as the octagonal prisms merge with square cupolas coming from the augments.