The Parameter Vault is where all the configurations you decide to keep live. Unlike the temporary history that expires automatically, the vault is your permanent collection: every set you save there is available forever, ready to apply to the next similar project without having to generate from scratch.
The Parameters Table
The main view of the vault is a table with all saved configurations. Each row shows the set name, machine, material, favorites count, community "useful" marks count, views, visibility status (Public or Private) and creation date. On the far right are the available actions for each row.

The search bar at the top filters by name instantly. To the right of the search are two independent filters: one for material and one for machine. You can combine them — for example, see only parameters for Acrylic Black 3mm on any Diode machine — to quickly find the right set when you are in the middle of a job.

Public Visibility and Community
Each parameter has a visibility toggle that you can change at any time between Private and Public. When a parameter is public, it appears in the community exploration section where other Gravo users can find it, mark it as a favorite and mark it as useful after applying it to their own projects.

The Favorites and Useful columns are community feedback: favorites indicates how many people saved that parameter to their list, while useful counts "this worked for me" marks — a more valuable signal because it requires actually having tried it. A parameter with many useful marks is a configuration validated by real operators under real conditions.

Adding Parameters Manually
In addition to parameters saved from the assistant, you can add configurations manually using the + Add Parameter button in the upper right corner. This is useful when you have your own values tested in your workshop that you want to centralize in the vault alongside the rest of your configurations, even if you did not generate them with the assistant.

Over time the vault becomes your own knowledge base. Every new material you test, every adjustment you refine, every configuration that works — all of it is recorded, organized and accessible. That is what eliminates uncertainty in future projects: no longer wondering which values to use, but going straight to your vault and finding the answer.

