Toroidal blend of 8 octahedra

The  is a Stewart toroid that consists of 48 triangles. It can be obtained by outer-blending eight octahedra together in a rhombus-shaped loop. The four octahedra at the vertices of the virtual rhombus are all oriented in the same way; the other four serve as triangular antiprisms.

Relations
Twelve copies of this toroid can be blended together, each blending pair coinciding at three octahedra with collinear centers, to form a toroidal blend of 38 octahedra with cubic symmetry and an appearance like the skeleton of a rhombic dodecahedron.



The following skew apeirohedron, upon close examination, has rings of octahedra that are similar to these toroids.



Because the icosahedron has faces in the same planes as the octahedron, a version of this toroid can be made out of icosahedra. All of the Platonic solids can form eight-member rings except for the tetrahedron.



If we create an isosceles trapezoidal loop of octahedra using two of the basic structures laid out here, we can blend two of these loops together to get a larger version of this toroid with an additional "bridge" of octahedra obliquely crossing it.