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Phil68
12-25-2019, 09:15 PM
I posted this over at CU...

Using what you've learned from your experiences and needs regarding 3rd party G/A, what would your business model look like? You're in charge. Go...

familytoad
12-25-2019, 10:22 PM
I'd start with the basic customer service model.
What do the customers actually want from such a product?

It's becoming easy to list what they DON'T want, which is much of what they are getting.

Here's a list off the top of my head on what a new service would need to provide:


Impartiality.
Intelligence on the market conditions.
Integrity.
Fair,consistent grading no matter who the submitter is.
Solid, secure,attractive holders. Reasonable font size.
Population reports with full data on variations etc
Registry sets, easy way to register them with ownership changes.
Reasonable wait times.
Responsive, interactive service with submitters
Some Hobby altruism to ensure the life cycle of their product and the hobby itself
More integrity.

conor912
12-25-2019, 11:53 PM
I wouldn’t grade. I’d authenticate and slab and let collectors decide for themselves what grade it is.

GasHouseGang
12-26-2019, 12:57 AM
I'd start with the basic customer service model.
What do the customers actually want from such a product?

It's becoming easy to list what they DON'T want, which is much of what they are getting.

Here's a list off the top of my head on what a new service would need to provide:


Impartiality.
Intelligence on the market conditions.
Integrity.
Fair,consistent grading no matter who the submitter is.
Solid, secure,attractive holders. Reasonable font size.
Population reports with full data on variations etc
Registry sets, easy way to register them with ownership changes.
Reasonable wait times.
Responsive, interactive service with submitters
Some Hobby altruism to ensure the life cycle of their product and the hobby itself
More integrity.


I would agree with everything on you list, but add a determination by a mechanized process of authenticity and verification of no alterations (trimming, recoloring, corners rebuilt, etc.).

slightlyrounded
12-26-2019, 01:24 AM
Great question.

For me, I would pay a premium if I could have a public online report matching the slab number. Something that included:


List of authentication sources consulted. This might include prior public sales, internal repository of notes, or a specialist for a particular issue.
Reasoning for an assigned grade (Similar to BGS, but with notes unique to card)
EXACT card dimensions
High resolution scans, with micrography if possible.
Ownership/provenance registry (public or private depending on submitter's preference).
Grader employee number, if not name. This would ensure any 'patterns' could be monitored by the hobby.


Would love to see a ton of optionality on slab presentation. In other words, could be a plain frame (submitter choses colour/style), or might contain information on front (grade, card number, year) as they do now. I personally would prefer a smaller slab, frame only, with any information on the reverse.

Finally - It would be great to have a company that is regularly willing to stick their neck out on forums and actually explain reasoning behind certain decisions or problems. Eg: "We missed these trimmed cards, here's why, and here is what we intend to do about it"........Or, "turnaround times are at 5 weeks, but here is how we intend to bring wait times down."

toledo_mudhen
12-26-2019, 06:59 AM
[QUOTE=slightlyrounded;1941824]

- Reasoning for an assigned grade (Similar to BGS, but with notes unique to card)

This one is really irritating - Pretty much everyone who has been in the hobby for any length of time can get into the "ballpark" on what a card should grade.

Too often you get your slabbed card back with only a

"To Bad"
"Not Good Enough"
"You lose"
"Have Nice Day"

T206Collector
12-26-2019, 07:15 AM
- A report for each card, similar to how the diamond industry does it, so you know where the flaws on the card are without having to guess.

- Some objective, impartial, computer-based system that would recognize the “fingerprints” on the card no matter how many times it was submitted.

- No more number grades, just “this is your card, here are the flaws, if you submit it to us again we will know it’s the same card even if you shave the border, recolor it, etc.”

mq711
12-26-2019, 07:30 AM
All the above plus actual centering numbers: 40/60 LR and 30/70 TB. Not sure why that isn’t already done.

bnorth
12-26-2019, 08:02 AM
I would use the best parts from the current companies.

Becketts, separate grades for corners, centering, edges, and surface. That way you really know where the good and bad areas are.

PSA, Marketing and registry

SGC, their coming soon scans of every card. Only really do it.

GAI, I really like their slabs. It is a combination of the new PSA slab with the awesome SGC black insert.

Then unlike all of the above keep everything on the up and up.

I know people have talked about a company that just authenticates cards without grades. There is no way that company would last and the owners would lose every penny they put into it.

vintagebaseballcardguy
12-26-2019, 08:24 AM
- A report for each card, similar to how the diamond industry does it, so you know where the flaws on the card are without having to guess.



- Some objective, impartial, computer-based system that would recognize the “fingerprints” on the card no matter how many times it was submitted.



- No more number grades, just “this is your card, here are the flaws, if you submit it to us again we will know it’s the same card even if you shave the border, recolor it, etc.”+1...could not agree more.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk

bnorth
12-26-2019, 08:41 AM
For those that want to do away with # grades please go into detail on how you would like it labeled.

Would all Authentic cards be labeled Authentic regardless of any alterations?

Would they be separated as Authentic and Authentic Altered?

Would only Authentic unaltered cards be slabbed?

megalimey
12-26-2019, 08:51 AM
I posted this over at CU...

Using what you've learned from your experiences and needs regarding 3rd party G/A, what would your business model look like? You're in charge. Go...

I would start by trying to raise at least $10,000,000 ABOUT THE COST start up of a small operation one 1/20th of the size of PSA that would likely be out of business with in a year for lack of business.
But at least I can tell my investors my intentions were honorable.

Jstottlemire1
12-26-2019, 09:24 AM
- A report for each card, similar to how the diamond industry does it, so you know where the flaws on the card are without having to guess.

- Some objective, impartial, computer-based system that would recognize the “fingerprints” on the card no matter how many times it was submitted.

- No more number grades, just “this is your card, here are the flaws, if you submit it to us again we will know it’s the same card even if you shave the border, recolor it, etc.”

I agree with this spot on. We then can look and buy what we can or can’t deal with. It would level market for people that really like a card. They can pay for the card not the grade, grade then doesn’t effect the buyer or dealers leverages on the sale.

T206Collector
12-26-2019, 10:21 AM
For those that want to do away with # grades please go into detail on how you would like it labeled.

Would all Authentic cards be labeled Authentic regardless of any alterations?

Would they be separated as Authentic and Authentic Altered?

Would only Authentic unaltered cards be slabbed?

Again, same as diamond industry: “Authentic diamond, here are the flaws.”

Don’t underestimate the power of people who have thousands and millions invested in the subjective, human based, plastic with a number from 1-10 on it, to preserve the status quo.

But when (not if) a technology comes along that’s good enough you will see a paradigm shift, like the iPhone or Netflix or Spotify... etc. etc. I hear some people still have really great cassette tape collections...

Johnny630
12-26-2019, 10:29 AM
Again, same as diamond industry: “Authentic diamond, here are the flaws.”

Don’t underestimate the power of people who have thousands and millions invested in the subjective, human based, plastic with a number from 1-10 on it, to preserve the status quo.

But when (not if) a technology comes along that’s good enough you will see a paradigm shift, like the iPhone or Netflix or Spotify... etc. etc. I hear some people still have really great cassette tape collections...

The Major Issue is this........People with Big Money Tied up in PSA cards do not want that money/card their investment to be downplayed or labeled as worth less. They will deny any issues with their card in assigned grade. PSA will wholeheartedly agree and continue to pump their brand/product. They have many on their side......I can’t see them going away.

Phil68
12-26-2019, 10:36 AM
I would start by trying to raise at least $10,000,000 ABOUT THE COST start up of a small operation one 1/20th of the size of PSA that would likely be out of business with in a year for lack of business.
But at least I can tell my investors my intentions were honorable.

Nobody said anything about re-designing and re-opening PSA here. Virtually every person here would do a better job than that company currently does, so why are they still thriving? Habit? Collectors have no balls?

A service company wouldn't cost anywhere near 10m. You could start with basic and simple services that would cost around 25k. Then enjoy your philanthropy until you could find a service that may eat some of your costs...then, if you're lucky and attentive to collector needs, perhaps find one service that can make you a few bucks. The goal for many wouldn't be to get investors and be public. This is theoretical and only posted to learn what collectors value.

conor912
12-26-2019, 12:41 PM
I wouldn’t grade. I’d authenticate and slab and let collectors decide for themselves what grade it is.

I would also have a thinner and smaller slab so that having a complete graded set wouldn’t be an albatross.

benjulmag
12-26-2019, 01:09 PM
I posted this over at CU...

Using what you've learned from your experiences and needs regarding 3rd party G/A, what would your business model look like? You're in charge. Go...

IMO any successful business model would need to be predicated on a grading methodology that gives reasonable assurance the card has not been altered. As has been discussed ad nauseum, current grading methods will not detect expert alterations. Technology needs to be incorporated into the system to scientifically determine whether a card has been trimmed, color added, creases removed, corners spooned out. Granted, such a system will not be able to detect with 100% certainty whether a card has been altered. But if the technology exists or comes into being to have the probability of detecting alterations beyond a certain threshold, say 95% (two standard deviations), IMO game eventually over, assuming the startup is sufficiently capitalized. Why?

Because if the company was to randomly purchase several hundred PSA T206s graded 8 or higher and have them regraded using this new technology, I would wager the GREAT majority will be found to have been altered in one form or another. At that point the startup sets up at every major show and advertises in every major hobby publication touting these results; it would also try to get national and regional press coverage.

ASSUMING this were to happen, what NEW collector/investor would possibly be willing to pay big dollars for a PSA T206 unless it was regraded under this new method? And without a continued supply of new collectors/investors to the hobby being willing to buy graded cards at their current price levels, prices will plummet. Remember, these new collectors/investors have no current skin in the market, and their rational purchasing decisions would be based on what something actually is, not on some fantasy notion of what they want something to be. In contrast, the current owners/registry collectors view of rational buying behavior is not to do anything to cast doubt on the validity of the current grading system.

I recognize that many on this Board will think I am in la la land with this viewpoint. But, again, assuming the technology to do this exists/comes into being and becomes the system by which this new company grades cards, then IMO it simply a matter of adequate capitalization and marketing acumen to get the necessary word out. At that point, I believe this new company eventually becomes for certain issues the main TPG.

buymycards
12-26-2019, 01:23 PM
I wouldn’t grade. I’d authenticate and slab and let collectors decide for themselves what grade it is.

The only grades would be authentic or not authentic.

drcy
12-26-2019, 01:55 PM
Make sure it is never a publically traded company, so stock prices et al are never a part of the grading and authenticating and information process.

It should be a non-profit group (Which does not mean graders and workers don't get paid a fair salary and that money can't be invested back into the system).

It should have an outside board of directors who are concerned with the authentication and grading accuracy and process and how to disseminate that information to the public, not stock prices.

It should be treated as an academic endeavor. It should not be an "investment insurance" company.

I think it should stick to authentication (including alteration detection), and provide quality high-grade images for provenance, quality control and so people can grade fo themselves.

* * * *

I am not against a current board of experts being made to give opinions on the state of grading in the hobby. The hobby should start one right now, maybe something through SABR which is a well-known and respect non-profit academic group.

JollyElm
12-26-2019, 04:13 PM
I would make every inch of the slab pitch black, 100% opaque, except for the label. Then the card itself wouldn't matter at all, just the number put on the holder...as it should be. :rolleyes:

378339

Phil68
12-26-2019, 05:16 PM
Make sure it is never a publically traded company, so stock prices et al are never a part of the grading and authenticating and information process.

It should be a non-profit group (Which does not mean graders and workers don't get paid a fair salary and that money can't be invested back into the system).

It should have an outside board of directors who are concerned with the authentication and grading accuracy and process and how to disseminate that information to the public, not stock prices.

It should be treated as an academic endeavor. It should not be an "investment insurance" company.

I think it should stick to authentication (including alteration detection), and provide quality high-grade images for provenance, quality control and so people can grade fo themselves.

* * * *

I am not against a current board of experts being made to give opinions on the state of grading in the hobby. The hobby should start one right now, maybe something through SABR which is a well-known and respect non-profit academic group.

This is most in-line with my thoughts.

Phil68
12-26-2019, 05:29 PM
I would also have a thinner and smaller slab so that having a complete graded set wouldn’t be an albatross.

I hear you there...

I have personally experimented with various molds and a holder really cannot be made smaller than PSA's without getting to the brink of compromising strength. Beckett, SGC and PSA have done a great job designing their holders (kills me to give any credit there, but they earned it). You could, perhaps, take up to 1/16" on each side which would give you almost .13" smaller both ways and still maintain a workable ultrasonic seal and still be able to holder '52-'56 and smaller (using an insert).

Each mold and horn you make requires a pretty hefty investment. Truth is, a workable new holder would look pretty different than what folks are used to and actually be a touch BIGGER. Not huge, but bigger. Each would be a virtual art presentation.

bnorth
12-26-2019, 05:31 PM
I would make every inch of the slab pitch black, 100% opaque, except for the label. Then the card itself wouldn't matter at all, just the number put on the holder...as it should be. :rolleyes:

378339

This would work great till the first person wanted to crack and resubmit. The slabs are all empty and the company(LLC) closed its doors. Everyone is living the life of luxury in country without a extradition treaty with the US.:D

JollyElm
12-26-2019, 05:41 PM
This would work great till the first person wanted to crack and resubmit. The slabs are all empty and the company(LLC) closed its doors. Everyone is living the life of luxury in country without a extradition treaty with the US.:D

Oh, did I forget to mention, the labels are actually in pencil. There is no cracking and resubmitting. You just erase the number and add whatever you want it to say there. No examination of the card is ever necessary. It's the perfect grading solution.

Mark17
12-26-2019, 06:21 PM
The only grades would be authentic or not authentic.

I think there should be 2 grades:
Authentic / Counterfeit
Original / Altered

Then a brief description of any alterations on the back label such as:

Recolored
Trimmed
Corners

Phil68
12-26-2019, 06:38 PM
I saw where PSA took this exact thread down after one reply. What did I miss? Has that whole company lost its collective mind? I haven't been on community message boards for awhile but if you can't discuss what collectors value on a collector chatboard...what, exactly, should one discuss? I would think they would watch that thread like a hawk and respond to the needs/wants of their customers where it's possible...maybe even engage in responses of why something isn't feasible, etc.
The moderator said it could "get ugly"?

If I asked "How does everyone like their Italian beef?" on a sandwich shop board and they closed the question, I'd wonder what the heck I was eating, Lol.

perezfan
12-26-2019, 07:10 PM
I think there should be 2 grades:
Authentic / Counterfeit
Original / Altered

Then a brief description of any alterations on the back label such as:

Recolored
Trimmed
Corners

This is what I’d like to happen as well. But the grading company must actually know how to detect and assess alteration, and do it with 100% impartiality. A far cry from what we have now.

Number grades are purely subjective, and only lead to fraud and corruption. They feed the egos that fuel the worst attributes within our hobby. And who needs a 3rd party to assess a number grade anyway? It’s the collector’s damn property - not theirs. So just confirm the authenticity, then let US determine the aesthetics. People are way too hypnotized and conditioned to believe a number is a necessity.

RCMcKenzie
12-26-2019, 07:12 PM
I think there should be 2 grades:
Authentic / Counterfeit
Original / Altered

Then a brief description of any alterations on the back label such as:

Recolored
Trimmed
Corners

I would like a tpg like this, but I doubt the people with a Jeter rookie would like it. Am I wrong that a 7 sells for $250 and a 10 sells for $166,000. Maybe I missed it, and the 10 is some type of refractor/insert? You can't really put that horse back in the barn.

perezfan
12-26-2019, 07:14 PM
I saw where PSA took this exact thread down after one reply. What did I miss? Has that whole company lost its collective mind? I haven't been on community message boards for awhile but if you can't discuss what collectors value on a collector chatboard...what, exactly, should one discuss? I would think they would watch that thread like a hawk and respond to the needs/wants of their customers where it's possible...maybe even engage in responses of why something isn't feasible, etc.
The moderator said it could "get ugly"?

If I asked "How does everyone like their Italian beef?" on a sandwich shop board and they closed the question, I'd wonder what the heck I was eating, Lol.

So corrupt. Josef Stalin would run a more informative, more communicative and better forum than those corporate criminals.

Mark17
12-26-2019, 07:44 PM
I would like a tpg like this, but I doubt the people with a Jeter rookie would like it. Am I wrong that a 7 sells for $250 and a 10 sells for $166,000. Maybe I missed it, and the 10 is some type of refractor/insert? You can't really put that horse back in the barn.

A new TPG that focused on the basics of authenticating would not put PSA out of business. The people who want to play the PSA grading game could continue to do so.

RCMcKenzie
12-26-2019, 08:04 PM
A new TPG that focused on the basics of authenticating would not put PSA out of business. The people who want to play the PSA grading game could continue to do so.

The thing is, most people that don't care about graded tpg slabs can tell what they have. They won't send cards in to be graded. I know if someone put a BSF card in an "Aut-only/unaltered" holder, people would still look at it with a jaundiced eye, at least I would.

RCMcKenzie
12-26-2019, 08:34 PM
Maybe I'm not a customer, but it could work for new people that are just entering the hobby. They buy a T206 raw and want peace of mind. They don't want to resell. They want thin, stackable slabs.

This card arrived today. I bought it for the Sov460 back. I have no reason to have it graded. It looks in the 5.5-6 range, but there's a crease on the back, maybe a 2.5?. If I ever sold it, I would send it to a number grade tpg to slab for the buyer...

Mark17
12-26-2019, 08:39 PM
The thing is, most people that don't care about graded tpg slabs can tell what they have. They won't send cards in to be graded. I know if someone put a BSF card in an "Aut-only/unaltered" holder, people would still look at it with a jaundiced eye, at least I would.

I agree, a service like we're talking about would not appeal to everyone. It would appeal to me however, because the reasons I like graded cards are to assure they are real (not counterfeit) and I want them in slabs for protection. Checking for alterations would be a nice bonus.

I am not looking to pay huge money for a high-graded card; I just want to know that what I do have is authentic. I can use my eyes to see the card's natural imperfections.

Phil68
12-26-2019, 08:54 PM
So corrupt. Josef Stalin would run a more informative, more communicative and better forum than those corporate criminals.

While I don't know enough about potential criminal activity, I can say they are dreadfully inconsistent and lack communication skills. The criminal stuff I'm just getting educated about since joining this forum.

Phil68
12-26-2019, 08:55 PM
I agree, a service like we're talking about would not appeal to everyone. It would appeal to me however, because the reasons I like graded cards are to assure they are real (not counterfeit) and I want them in slabs for protection. Checking for alterations would be a nice bonus.

I am not looking to pay huge money for a high-graded card; I just want to know that what I do have is authentic. I can use my eyes to see the card's natural imperfections.

This makes sense to me and probably to the majority of folks here.

Aquarian Sports Cards
12-26-2019, 08:59 PM
Maybe I'm not a customer, but it could work for new people that are just entering the hobby. They buy a T206 raw and want peace of mind. They don't want to resell. They want thin, stackable slabs.

This card arrived today. I bought it for the Sov460 back. I have no reason to have it graded. It looks in the 5.5-6 range, but there's a crease on the back, maybe a 2.5?. If I ever sold it, I would send it to a number grade tpg to slab for the buyer...

Don't quit your day job :), crease is visible on the front as well, runs right up his torso. Still there was a time this would've gotten a 3 or even better. Now I think you're right with 2.5.

RCMcKenzie
12-26-2019, 09:22 PM
Don't quit your day job :), crease is visible on the front as well, runs right up his torso. Still there was a time this would've gotten a 3 or even better. Now I think you're right with 2.5.

Yeah, when I say "I am not a grader" it's not a selling tactic, it's true. When I was growing up, any T206 that was not torn in half was called "good".

Hey, I saw you bought the Buchner Bushong. Let me know if you are moving that one. I already have Cahill...Rob

Bigdaddy
12-26-2019, 11:41 PM
I would like a tpg like this, but I doubt the people with a Jeter rookie would like it. Am I wrong that a 7 sells for $250 and a 10 sells for $166,000. Maybe I missed it, and the 10 is some type of refractor/insert? You can't really put that horse back in the barn.

Agreed about the horse and barn. The whole pricing structure as we know it would have to collapse and folks would loose tremendous amounts of money. The only way the exponential price differences at the high end of the grading scale work is if a TPG has put a number on a plastic holder and people buy and sell based on that number, not what they can see with their eyes. Its also how the registry sets are ranked - and that is where the big money lives. How could I know that my set is better than yours (or anyone else's) if I have not had a TPG look at each card and give it a grade?

I'd like to see an authenticator/alteration detector come into the market, but I don't think it would be sustainable (without the number grades) without significant change to the market.

We've only been under the spell of TPGs for a relatively few years, but just like smart phones, there is no going back now.

And just for full disclosure, 99.9X% of my collection is raw, untouched by the soiled hands of he TPGs. However I won't proclaim that it is 100% untouched by the trimmers/forgers.

ullmandds
12-27-2019, 07:40 AM
I would like a tpg like this, but I doubt the people with a Jeter rookie would like it. Am I wrong that a 7 sells for $250 and a 10 sells for $166,000. Maybe I missed it, and the 10 is some type of refractor/insert? You can't really put that horse back in the barn.


Exactly! This is the BIG problem!

ullmandds
12-27-2019, 07:43 AM
But the more I think about it...maybe this is OK? It's helping to reallocate resources away from the filthy rich to the less rich?

T205 GB
12-27-2019, 08:07 AM
I hear you there...

I have personally experimented with various molds and a holder really cannot be made smaller than PSA's without getting to the brink of compromising strength. Beckett, SGC and PSA have done a great job designing their holders (kills me to give any credit there, but they earned it). You could, perhaps, take up to 1/16" on each side which would give you almost .13" smaller both ways and still maintain a workable ultrasonic seal and still be able to holder '52-'56 and smaller (using an insert).

Each mold and horn you make requires a pretty hefty investment. Truth is, a workable new holder would look pretty different than what folks are used to and actually be a touch BIGGER. Not huge, but bigger. Each would be a virtual art presentation.


Try using a different material for making the slabs and get away from the idea of an ultrasonic sealer. There IS a material and A WAY to seal it that will revolutionize the grading industry but you have to find it if you are planning to use it. Waterproof, UV blocker, flame retardant to over 600 degrees, unbreakable, and once sealed would require a band saw to open. The molds would require heating the sheet and press molding it so no injection molds. Could be done in your garage if you had the right stuff.

T205 GB
12-27-2019, 09:06 AM
But the grading company must actually know how to detect and assess alteration, and do it with 100% impartiality. A far cry from what we have now.
.

People grading are not invested in the hobby like we are. Its a job for someone, and has high turnover. They don't care about anything except hitting the production numbers required. If there was a company that could start out and afford knowledgeable people then it could be different. Problem is I would not give up my income, I am sure this applies to others as well, for a $25-35K a year job grading other peoples cards. Its not lucrative!

If there were 4-5 investors that put in the time and money, $150,000-250,000 each, for a program and new slabbing techniques then maybe we could have a revolution in the hobby and make significant changes for the betterment of all collectors. Transparency is a must so staying away from possible employees that have TPG ties with other companies is pertinent to survival. Ex: "Joe works for TBD Grading over the last 5 years. Some shady dealing have been tied to the company for some time. He now wants to come join the new TPG company." I can tell you from what I know that this has not worked out the best for those people or the TPD companies that have started like this.

Aquarian Sports Cards
12-27-2019, 04:04 PM
Dumb question. Coins is a much older market, and has been grading longer. Did they ever undergo a similar scandal/issue? Did they get through it? I guess it's harder to "trim" a coin, but I know there are lots of things done to improve their appearance.

sb1
12-28-2019, 09:58 AM
Dumb question. Coins is a much older market, and has been grading longer. Did they ever undergo a similar scandal/issue? Did they get through it? I guess it's harder to "trim" a coin, but I know there are lots of things done to improve their appearance.


The coin hobby is constantly bombarded with fakes, fake slabs, fake inserts, just like cards, as well as laser enhanced coins, etc and PCGS is constantly trying to keep up or one step ahead. It is a never ending cat and mouse game.

sb1
12-28-2019, 10:01 AM
Dumb question. Coins is a much older market, and has been grading longer. Did they ever undergo a similar scandal/issue? Did they get through it? I guess it's harder to "trim" a coin, but I know there are lots of things done to improve their appearance.


The graded coin hobby is constantly bombarded with fakes, fake slabs, fake inserts, just like cards, as well as laser enhanced coins, etc and PCGS is constantly trying to keep up or one step ahead. It is a never ending cat and mouse game.

conor912
12-28-2019, 10:53 AM
I hear you there...

I have personally experimented with various molds and a holder really cannot be made smaller than PSA's without getting to the brink of compromising strength. Beckett, SGC and PSA have done a great job designing their holders (kills me to give any credit there, but they earned it). You could, perhaps, take up to 1/16" on each side which would give you almost .13" smaller both ways and still maintain a workable ultrasonic seal and still be able to holder '52-'56 and smaller (using an insert).

Each mold and horn you make requires a pretty hefty investment. Truth is, a workable new holder would look pretty different than what folks are used to and actually be a touch BIGGER. Not huge, but bigger. Each would be a virtual art presentation.

I guess I was thinking more about thickness than anything else. I don’t see why we can have a “slab” that’s basically a top loader with a gasket and the 4th side sealed shut. Yes it would need to be taller to accommodate some sort of flip and no it would not be as strong, but I’ve honestly never once felt like I needed more protection than a top loader. Maybe some guys toss their cards down flights of stairs....I don’t know.

Phil68
12-28-2019, 11:26 AM
I guess I was thinking more about thickness than anything else. I don’t see why we can have a “slab” that’s basically a top loader with a gasket and the 4th side sealed shut. Yes it would need to be taller to accommodate some sort of flip and no it would not be as strong, but I’ve honestly never once felt like I needed more protection than a top loader. Maybe some guys toss their cards down flights of stairs....I don’t know.

I like it. The cards would still display really nicely and take up far less room. The Mylar insert would be key. Paper collectibles do require more long term protection than the plastic coffins.

Phil68
12-28-2019, 11:28 AM
I guess I was thinking more about thickness than anything else. I don’t see why we can have a “slab” that’s basically a top loader with a gasket and the 4th side sealed shut. Yes it would need to be taller to accommodate some sort of flip and no it would not be as strong, but I’ve honestly never once felt like I needed more protection than a top loader. Maybe some guys toss their cards down flights of stairs....I don’t know.

I'll be right back...I have to do my daily card toss down the stairs...tomorrow I have a roof drop scheduled--should be interesting

bnorth
12-28-2019, 11:57 AM
I guess I was thinking more about thickness than anything else. I don’t see why we can have a “slab” that’s basically a top loader with a gasket and the 4th side sealed shut. Yes it would need to be taller to accommodate some sort of flip and no it would not be as strong, but I’ve honestly never once felt like I needed more protection than a top loader. Maybe some guys toss their cards down flights of stairs....I don’t know.

There is no grading involved but post 13 in this thread has something like what you are describing. http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=276726

Then if you want grading there is this. I have not seen one of their graded cards in a while. It used to be the sleeve you send cards to PSA in with a sticker across the top. They don't get the premium PSA does but there is NO WAY IN HELL they could do a worse job at grading. http://www.verisleeve.com/

EDIT: I have a complete SGC graded set and they do take up WAY too much space. I think if a honest grading company used a smaller version of what is posted in the first link it would be a giant improvement over the thick slabs that are offered now.

conor912
12-28-2019, 12:08 PM
I have a complete SGC graded set and they do take up WAY too much space. I think if a honest grading company used a smaller version of what is posted in the first link it would be a giant improvement over the thick slabs that are offered now.

Yeah....that’s way more gasket than I had in mind, but it’s certainly close otherwise!

perezfan
12-28-2019, 01:03 PM
I posted this over at CU...

Using what you've learned from your experiences and needs regarding 3rd party G/A, what would your business model look like? You're in charge. Go...

One that is honest.

swarmee
12-28-2019, 02:45 PM
I saw where PSA took this exact thread down after one reply. What did I miss? Has that whole company lost its collective mind? I haven't been on community message boards for awhile but if you can't discuss what collectors value on a collector chatboard...what, exactly, should one discuss? I would think they would watch that thread like a hawk and respond to the needs/wants of their customers where it's possible...maybe even engage in responses of why something isn't feasible, etc.
The moderator said it could "get ugly"?
You missed that PSA is actively trying to sweep the entire grading scandal of 2019 under the rug. So your post implying that a different grading company should come into being is something I would have easily expected to get you banned from their website. Consider yourself lucky you just got your post locked. PSA doesn't want your suggestions; they just want your cash.

perezfan
12-28-2019, 03:10 PM
You missed that PSA is actively trying to sweep the entire grading scandal of 2019 under the rug. So your post implying that a different grading company should come into being is something I would have easily expected to get you banned from their website. Consider yourself lucky you just got your post locked. PSA doesn't want your suggestions; they just want your cash.

But why would anyone remotely want to participate in any forum in which thoughtful/insightful posts are censored, and honest people with good intentions are banned?

Come on, Sheeple!! :mad:

bnorth
12-28-2019, 03:53 PM
But why would anyone remotely want to participate in any forum in which thoughtful/insightful posts are censored, and honest people with good intentions are banned?

Come on, Sheeple!! :mad:

That is a very good question.:D

Maybe it fits their collecting habits, maybe they are bored and have nothing better to do.

Fred
12-29-2019, 04:39 PM
It's almost as if "regulation" of TPGs should be required.

Ensure graders are trained and know what they're looking at.

Only allow highly qualified graders to assess high value cards. These highly qualified graders would "register" as an expert and be provided with a "grader ID" number.

The graders name would remain anonymous in the event some type of legal assessment was being weighed. At least the collecting public could see a pattern if one were to emerge with a specific grader. It also adds a little credibility to the TPG. The thought is that if the TPG has to keep things transparent then having people accountable may actually produce a more "realistic" TPG that is actually not associated with "sales" or potential sales.

Kind of hard to believe there isn't something going on today with all the crap we've seen in the past few years.

Bottom line, there needs to be accountability in the TPGs.

1952boyntoncollector
12-29-2019, 06:55 PM
i'd have a card database (owner registry) so the same card couldnt be sold on the market if a person can verify if the serial number is already owned by someone else who isnt selling it...also avoids fraud...

id also have a a 'best of the best' card award...

Phil68
12-29-2019, 08:03 PM
It's almost as if "regulation" of TPGs should be required.

Ensure graders are trained and know what they're looking at.

Only allow highly qualified graders to assess high value cards. These highly qualified graders would "register" as an expert and be provided with a "grader ID" number.

The graders name would remain anonymous in the event some type of legal assessment was being weighed. At least the collecting public could see a pattern if one were to emerge with a specific grader. It also adds a little credibility to the TPG. The thought is that if the TPG has to keep things transparent then having people accountable may actually produce a more "realistic" TPG that is actually not associated with "sales" or potential sales.

Kind of hard to believe there isn't something going on today with all the crap we've seen in the past few years.

Bottom line, there needs to be accountability in the TPGs.


I'm astonished this isn't already in place. Seems like the grader ID would be in place since Day 1

steve B
12-29-2019, 08:41 PM
Dumb question. Coins is a much older market, and has been grading longer. Did they ever undergo a similar scandal/issue? Did they get through it? I guess it's harder to "trim" a coin, but I know there are lots of things done to improve their appearance.

Nothing I can recall that was quite like this. But as someone else mentioned, there have been all sorts of problems.

In stamps, which has had authentication for a LONG time, there has been a comparable situation. The Philatelic Foundation had a person who was the one entering the certificates into their computer. That person would ensure that stamps submitted by an alterer got good certificates, even if the expert committee had put in writing that it was bad. (Fake, altered, repaired, whatever. ) One of the guys doing the faking even had a license plate that was "stamp MD"

But they handled it right, Immediately reviewed all of a dealers submisions when the first one was discovered by an employee, tightened security and processes, bought back what stamps they could find (Fired the guy responsible, who was also arrested)
They built their reputation back up, and are one of the better authenticators, generally for US stamps.
Each country does the authenticating slightly differently.
Germany they used to stamp the expertizers name on the back.
They have had scandals too, one expert was essentially the only expert in one narrow field (Upper Silesia overprints) He was also the source of many fakes, all certified by..... him.
That one didn't have a happy ending...

steve B
12-29-2019, 08:46 PM
Link about the scandal at the PF
https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1985-09-30-8503070069-story.html