The pit was arranged with larges bifaces to the middle and spalls and flakes to the outside. I can't remember how many bifaces were in the pit but they are long so if they crack we should still have some nice material to work with anyway. My goal is to have one nice paleo blade for the display I am working on. I think 6-8 are in the pit. I guessed a couple could crack and I would break a couple and maybe get a good one. Big points are hard to come by. First you have to find quality and size. This is difficult when out crops are the source material and contain ice cracking. Then you have to have some luck and hammer stone cortex without causing freeze cracks to expand. Then you have to working. It to a biface without snapping it from a bad hit. If you make it this far then it must survive the heat treating. If the heat is ok ,not to brittle and not too under cooked then it might flake well if there are no imperfections in the stone. So the road is long for large blades.