![]() |
Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware
The principle that the buyer alone is responsible for checking the quality and suitability of goods before a purchase is made. When it comes to sports cards, it's like musical flips, whatever the current flip indicates is what matters to a lot of people. TPGs are subjective, however if a trusted TPG indicates they believe there's something wrong, then wouldn't you like to know that before you purchase it, even though another TPG says the card is good to go? In this case the winner is PSA and the consignor because a higher grading fee was paid and the consignor is going to bank off that. Now if PSA were the consignor, I'd be wondering "wassup". |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
If nobody has done anything to a card to make it gain value by virtue of a bump in a grade (i.e. the 6 to 8 example of an SGC Min Size to PSA 6.5) then I feel disclosure could be made but it is 100% not necessary. Don't care if the card went from being worth 10 cents in the first assessment to being worth 150K in the second. This is nothing more than a different opinion based on a different day at the grading service. For anyone who submits a lot of cards and knows how almost random the assessments are, they would know that an opinion changing is a non event. Travis has alluded to this often and shown examples of it many times. From my vantage point, if you do something to a card, even if it is innocent and what a majority of the board agrees is ok to do, and the card gets a bump in grade, then that needs to/should be disclosed. |
As to your last point, that of course is where the overwhelming majority of the hobby's issues lie. And we will rarely, if ever, see disclosure even when known.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
That said, the fact that a card is in a "Min Size" holder does not mean it is likely to be trimmed but that they just couldn't prove it. And to say that it is "more likely" to be trimmed than a card in a numeric holder isn't particularly helpful. For example, a 1.25% chance of something is "more likely" than a 1.00% chance, but both are still extremely unlikely events. You really have to look at the card holistically and make your own best judgment. And with this particular card, I would be extremely confident that it has in fact NOT been trimmed. Because if a trimmer skilled enough to fool both SGC and PSA had gotten his hands on it, he certainly would have trimmed that giant left edge, as the card measures wide without question. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
. |
1 Attachment(s)
I remember that card… It was weird looking. Those are rare cards not many examples and some of them look weird yours looked weird...to me. SGC erred on the side of caution PSA is PSA!
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Fun fact. When a poll is neck and neck the entire way, and then suddenly breaks 10+ straight votes in one direction after a sample size of 160 votes, it usually means those votes were recruited. Not that it matters, but that would be pretty funny to me if someone here is taking the results so seriously that they felt the urge to recruit. Lol
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I remember from stats class that a sample size of 160 in statistics is generally considered a good, medium-sized sample for most research studies. Funny that as soon as we got to that number, something went haywire. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I wonder if it's not recruiting votes as much as it is people reacting to the various turns of the discussion.
|
When it was 79 no to 78 yes, discussion needed to immediately stop and the yes voters needed to shut up and get over it.
When it is 89 no to 95 yes, the vote might be rigged and Peter probably cheated to bring voters to the poll button. Do you have alt accounts Peter? Why didn't you freeze the poll at the moment the No's were up by 1? Do you have a swarm of alt accounts or have you imporperly influenced voters to push them to vote Yes through unfair means? This is so wrong. In reality, it's been within a handful of votes of exactly 50/50 the entire time. Now, I believe by the rule of Ryan, anyone who voted No has to cut the cope and get over it until that option is winning again, in which case Yes voters must shut up. |
|
I was approached by recruiters from both sides. Ultimately, I went with the highest offer.
(I'm kidding, for those who might have missed it.) :D |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Definitely vote harvesting!!
I demand Leon disclose the names and locations of the last 10-15 new Net54 members to suddenly join up. If they all share the same address at a nursing home somewhere, then we have our answer. :D |
Quote:
I respectfully disagree. And there's nothing wrong with that. There are 0 other specimens of that pose except maybe one at the LOC. It was a 7k card and, imo, it would have been a lot of work for that to be made as a counterfeit. I bought it from a book seller on ebay. He offered me a full refund and I said, no, SGC dropped the ball. All good. |
Hi Leon! I agree that counterfeiting it made no sense. It just looked different under a loope than any other 19th century photographic card I had seen. Hope all is well with you and yours!
|
Quote:
About to hop on a plane and back to Lucas.. |
Safe trip my friend!
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
1 Attachment(s)
This card just ended a few minutes ago on ebay. It sold for about halfway between what a 4 and 5 would sell for. And there were 5 separate bidders who all had bids in above the PSA 4 value.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/326415150504 |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quite a contrast between SGC and PSA, who's altered cards in numbered slabs often resemble maracas. |
I always assumed gaskets were custom cut. Just an assumption
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
You have to vote no, simply for the fact, how do you differentiate between who got it right and who got it wrong?
|
Some here are way too sensitive about this (and similar) issues. As long as there is no real threat of future harm, disclosure of the card’s grading history should neither be required nor recommended.
Also, grading is only an opinion. It’s not fact. And with the amount of stupidity happening in grading these days, disclosure of an opinion is akin to someone relying on a witch doctor for a serious medical problem. |
Greg-I’d agree with you on a card getting an SGC4 and then a PSA5. However, this card was deemed unsuitable for a numerical grade three months earlier. Maybe SGC measured it and PSA didn’t. Maybe SGC inspected the sides and saw evidence of trimming and PSA didn’t. All I’m saying is that someone spending six figures for a card that three months earlier sold for twenty something thousand and whose write-up, by the exact same auction house, alluded to the possibility of trimming may wish to know the history. They may decide it is meaningless and choose to ignore it, or they might think it is relevant. I strongly believe that they should have the information and be able to make that choice for themselves.
|
I am selling a collectible. That collectibles value is heavily dependent on the appeal to authority that comes with it, stating what it is and what condition it is in. The top 2 experts in the field both examined it and gave very, very different analyses.
Is it more ethical for me to take 3 seconds to disclose both analyses, to tell the full truth, or to only disclose the one that helps the sale price the most? While many people would not/do not state inconvenient things when selling in any hobby, this is the only hobby I have seen where ~50% won't even pay lip service to telling the full truth and pretend that not telling the truth is equally or more ethical. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:34 PM. |