guy wrote:I bet you only posted this so it would hook me in!

I wouldn't say "only"
I am new to this forum, so I hope I am not repeating stuff the rest of you already know.
The forum's for anyone and everyone, so don't worry about repeating anything people might already know.
Like the snub cube (and all uniform polyhedra), this facetting has vertices all alike within its symmetry - we say that it is isogonal.
As you say, it has faces all alike too - it is isohedral.
A polyhedron which is both isogonal and isohedral is called noble.
Oh yeah, somehow I wasn't even thinking about the fact that it was isogonal as well
By the way, the same thing doesn't work with the snub dodecahedron, in case anyone was wondering, because the edges placed diagonally across the pentagons leave a pentagrammic hole to fill, where as those across the square faces of the snub cube meet others to close the shape.
Noble polyhedra were first studied in depth by Bruckner, a hundred years ago. Since then, Branko Grünbaum has revived interest in them. I wonder if this one has been described before.
Yeah, Bruckner's 1906 isogonal isohedra can be found in the Stella Library with Great Stella and Stella4D, but this one was not amongst them.
I just noticed that it is self-dual too, so it is also a stellation of the pentagonal icositetrahedron, dual of the snub cube.
Rob.