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  #1  
Old 05-26-2019, 04:44 PM
ullmandds's Avatar
ullmandds ullmandds is offline
pete ullman
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Default TPG Grading Process/Rules/Guidelines for graders

Is this a big mystery what actually happens to cards when they are sent to be graded by TPG'ers? Does anyone know the process? The training of the "graders?" Are there "notes" that the "graders" are given regarding issues so they can refer to these "notes" since they don't really know about most card issues?

You'd think that former employees would have given insight into this? Are employees forcd to sign indefinite non-disclosure forms stating they will never ever discuss this?

And I'm guessing "graders" aren't paid much?

Do we know what technology is used...if any?

WTF???
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Old 05-26-2019, 05:18 PM
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asphaltman asphaltman is offline
Dave Fa*st
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It’d be nice if the graders had some information on their websites stating how they grade, how they teach grading, what do they do when they honestly just don’t have any knowledge on a rare issue.
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  #3  
Old 05-26-2019, 05:25 PM
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CobbSpikedMe CobbSpikedMe is offline
Andrew Hunt00n
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The graders know about all issues no matter how rare they are. They take lots of notes when they are reviewing a card and have to type up their notes in the system before they can leave for the day. They don't sign non-disclosure agreements but they do love the company so much that they never tell the secrets of the grader after they leave. And everything I've typed in this post is a big pile of horse neers.
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  #4  
Old 05-26-2019, 05:33 PM
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ullmandds ullmandds is offline
pete ullman
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CobbSpikedMe View Post
The graders know about all issues no matter how rare they are. They take lots of notes when they are reviewing a card and have to type up their notes in the system before they can leave for the day. They don't sign non-disclosure agreements but they do love the company so much that they never tell the secrets of the grader after they leave. And everything I've typed in this post is a big pile of horse neers.
haha...your description was sounding like the day of a doctor!!!!
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Old 05-26-2019, 06:31 PM
jad22 jad22 is offline
Joe D
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I imagine cards are fabricated by the manufacturer to a certain length and width using nominal values for each. Obviously, the nominal value is not going to be hit during the entire manufacturing period so there will be some differences. Where does PSA find these tolerances? They have to know what would be considered undersized for a certain card set or are they not measuring at all? How are they are measuring? Read all sorts of posts over the years where somebody who has pulled the card from the original pack submitted it and it came back not meeting the size requirements.
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Old 05-26-2019, 07:13 PM
steve B steve B is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jad22 View Post
I imagine cards are fabricated by the manufacturer to a certain length and width using nominal values for each. Obviously, the nominal value is not going to be hit during the entire manufacturing period so there will be some differences. Where does PSA find these tolerances? They have to know what would be considered undersized for a certain card set or are they not measuring at all? How are they are measuring? Read all sorts of posts over the years where somebody who has pulled the card from the original pack submitted it and it came back not meeting the size requirements.
Size varies a lot on most older sets, a bit less on stuff from postwar, and on many modern card sets shouldn't vary at all. It's all about the technology of the time, and the person doing the cutting.

I don't recall what PSA told me way back when they were new and I asked about 70's cards that were large or small from the factory. I'd like to say 1/64th of an inch under but since the holders were sized pretty closely no tolerance for oversize. But that was a long time ago.

That level of accuracy can be done easily with an inexpensive machinists rule. Starrett makes nice ones for under $30.
http://www.starrett.com/metrology/pr...-Rules/C304R-6

but even a cheap one is fairly accurate. 2.99

home depot machinists rule

If you're more serious, I have a digital caliper that can get within .001 in, and sort of accurately to 1/10000th. But it only costs $40-50 so I don't trust it that much.

Add a 40x loupe at under $10, and a bit of knowledge, and you're all set to detect most trimming. (Nearly all, if you act conservatively and reject any that don't seem quite "right" )
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