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"Possibly doctored" cards at the National.....
OK, I have a bunch of thoughts on the recent events, but I won't write them until a later date.
Suffice to say we all figured it had been going on, (at least in small amounts) but I think what is really bothering most people is its at a MUCH BIGGER scale than what most imagined. Forwarding past all that, think about this scenario. Suppose you go to the National, and are in search for a bigger ticket item. You have saved your hard earned cash, and plotted buying something for a good while, and the time came to finally pull the trigger on card X.(insert your own sought after card here) Let's face it, the National is the one time a year where you can get damn near anything. Just as an example, lets say we are in search of a '52 Topps Mickey Mantle. Again, pick your pre-war poison if you like, say a mid grade T206 Cobb, or literally whatever you choose. At this point, it really doesn't matter what card you choose, as long as its something that is A - highly desirable, and B - possibly "doctored". Let's also suppose we are going to spend $2,500 - $10,000.... so its not exactly pocket change, and we also know there is a "great chance???" this card may have been touched up over the years. My question is this, for all you guys that have a ton of experience at the Nationals. If you were truly looking to make a sizeable purchase of this nature, exactly how diligent would you be in examining the card you were considering? Further -, it appears as though using a small black light, might be one of the cheapest, handy and easiest to carry and use "items" at the Nationals to examine any purchase you were thinking about making. True, it isn't fool proof, but at least some alterations can be picked up via black light. For those that didn't necessarily know this, have a look here. ~~~~~> https://sabrbaseballcards.blog/2017/...uthentication/ (I'm sure there are many sites on this, that is just the fastest one I could find relating to black lights and card alterations.) I guess what I am asking, is did you ever do this "black light examination" when looking at a card at the National? Even if you did, or did NOT, how much more inclined are you to do this very thing at the upcoming National? I was thinking about this tonight. I can envision a scenario where bunches of people keep asking dealers to see cards. THEN everybody and their brother pulls out a black light and proceeds to go over said card they are considering purchasing.....all the while the dealer is rolling his eyes and telling himself "here we go again", as customer after customer is thoroughly examining and scrutinizing cards they are thinking about purchasing. Also note - This doesn't have to be about a '52 Topps Mantle, it could be said about a slew of cards now. Personally, any purchase of this nature, I would have wanted to give it at least a cursory once over. But now I'm betting this is going to be a very common scene this year. This has been something I considered, and it has been going through my head a bit lately. FWIW - I have never been to a National, and I am not in a position as to where I will be going this year either. I am just curious as to how much this is actually seen, and how much more frequent this may be happening from this year on at all the bigger shows. I would think for any "bigger" purchase like this, it was already fairly common for the cards to be examined very thoroughly. I can't help but think its going to be widespread this year in light of all the recent events. Even though this is the pre-war side of the board, this should be something interesting to all vintage collectors as well, say everything up until the 70's and even newer. EDIT - Leon, I figured this would be the better spot to originally post this, but if you want to re-post it over in the post-war section....feel free. |
Who buys a raw 52 Mantle or mid-grade T206 Cobb?
Edited to add: or any expensive card that common sense dictates should be in a holder. If an expensive common issue card (T206, 50s Topps) is being sold raw or in a non-PSA or SGC holder you can be certain it’s altered. And yes even in a PSA or SGC holder we have learned it can be altered. But if it’s raw you can be certain it is no matter how vociferously the seller tries to convince you it isn’t. |
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Not raw, I'm speaking of already graded. Everyone is of course going the graded route.....but you can still examine the card in detail, and use a black light on it. (actually, I have never used a black light on a card that is already slabbed, but I'm sure you can do it) I didn't spell it out specifically, but I am sure there are many that use black lights, or whatever it is they can to help examine a higher end card like that as best they can....... even though it is already slabbed. |
Don’t buy any big ticket items at the National. Save your money and wait for
the hobby to get hit considerably before you buy a big item. If the card market doesn’t go down you missed it so what you’ll have cash and right now I’d rather be cash heavy and card light then card heavy and cash light. I will never bring a black light to a show a 10x coin Loupe will be my only weapon along with 20/20. In my opinion for anything positive to happen a considerable downtrend and amount of money loss has to occur for everyone involved kinda like a take your lumps and bumps get hit then grow. If the collector/investor keeps fueling money to tpg’s ,auction houses, and dealers things will never change for the better. It happens to the US stock market ever so often then it always pops back stronger then ever...it will be healthy in the long run to the hobby. To many people are addicted to cards. I just hope they lay off them and can control themselves for a couple of years until the smoke clears. |
Seeing as the national tends to have notoriously high prices this would be a foolish endeavor...But to answer your question every time I go to a card show I bring a black light and a loop as part of my arsenal.
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But you can bet there can and will be plenty of bigger items swapping hands, through outright purchase, and or trades at the National I'm sure. I didn't even mention a loupe, although I know thats another one of the "go-to's" that many use in those cases. I figure people using "whatever they can" to scrutinize cards this year will be far more common than in years past. But as I alluded to , I would have wanted to give it a "cursory once over" even in the past. I'm guessing there will be a tremendous amount of card scrutiny this year. FAR MORE than ever before. Not that THAT is a bad thing. It's just too bad all of this had to happen. Short term this is really a bad spot for the hobby. But long term, hopefully it will be a good thing for us all. |
To actually answer your question I have had people use black lights at some of the large East Coast shows I am set up at. Doesn't insult me in the slightest. Even before all this went down I couldn't blame them.
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I can envision a scenario where bunches of people keep asking dealers to see cards. THEN everybody and their brother pulls out a black light and proceeds to go over said card they are considering purchasing.....all the while the dealer is rolling his eyes and telling himself "here we go again", as customer after customer is thoroughly examining and scrutinizing cards they are thinking about purchasing.
Also note - This doesn't have to be about a '52 Topps Mantle, it could be said about a slew of cards now. Personally, any purchase of this nature, I would have wanted to give it at least a cursory once over. But now I'm betting this is going to be a very common scene this year. I personally bring a black light, loupe and a ruler - both digital and regular when pursuing a large dollar card. I would think any dealer that objects may have something to hide and any dealer that is confident about the quality of his merchandise would welcome it, if they wish to sell stuff... |
I think you’ll all be surprised that nothing much will change at the National. Cards will be severely overpriced, the best cards will be at the auction house tables, and fat guys in baseball jerseys will be roaming the aisles. I don’t think an army of blacklights will be present.
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To do well at the National, you either have to be a seller or a bottom feeder buyer. I have done very well looking in dime boxes and at lower grade cards at the nationals I have attended, less well when i went on a mission.
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I would think that if someone has a problem with you looking at a card you're going to buy from them you probably don't want to buy cards from them.
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I have been to around 17 of the last 20 Nationals. IN the first ones I always bought big stuff and had a blast. The last 5-8 yrs I haven't really bought much. A few things here and there. I always bring a loupe but never a black light (that I used). I am way more leery after this scandal, of high grade cards, than before it. I don't see me buying any high grade cards soon at all. This type will be my focus and actually has been anyway. It could be messed with but my experience tells me it probably isn't. There are way too many of these in 8 holders. :) |
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I've never used a black light before purchasing a card. Is there a good portable unit anyone could recommend that would be good to have in your arsenal?
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There will be plenty of nice raw cards at the National with zero problems. Deal with reputable people and you will not have to worry. I will have many nice 52 Topps High #s which are 100% untampered with, the ones I did get graded were mostly 6-7's, a few 5's and a few 8's(I'll also have the PSA graded ones there). I will also have two sets of raw 1955 Topps All-American's, most Nrmt +/- and again all without issue. As an example, for the last two years i have been selling 1958-1963 Topps from the original owner. Several I had graded, again mostly 6-8's, but have sold hundreds of high grade raw cards from the collection. They do still exist! Just a couple of examples, obviously postwar. Provenance will start to mean more and more to collectors, when and where available.
A somewhat contrarian position might be to by raw instead of graded, perhaps the odds of finding untampered with cards might be better. |
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Hey how about you send me a fake and real one and I'll send the fake back to you? If you're right, it's a coin toss, better odds than Vegas. (Also applies to commons, and pretty much any set that isn't so uncommon that I've never seen one. |
My black light is used strictly for listening to Hendrix and Pink Floyd and smoking with hippies.
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I don't think the issue is whether one person can tell the difference. There is no logical reason why it wouldn't be slabbed unless there was something about the card that made it untouchable to TPG. People buy tables at shows to make money. Anyone who wants to make money is going to have a card like that graded, unless there's something wrong with it. |
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I'm confident I can spot stuff at least as well as TPG, maybe better in some cases. If the question had been if that's a good plan for all or even most collectors, that's different. Sadly, I have had multiple chances to buy some pretty "big" cards, and pretty much never did. The local dealer came back from either the national or philly with a 52 Mantle that had sold for a record price, and over the next few years had maybe 3-4 of them. They were expensive at the time compared to other cards, so I don't mind as much. But there were a few others.... :( |
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Any card like this would be IMMEDIATELY bought/flipped by a dealer to be holdered before any one of us made it in the show. Even with a dealer badge |
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Money- What's a 6 go for now? Sort of doesn't matter since I don't have that much. Interest - That's a ton of dough, especially for a double print. :D Of course, I could grade it and flip it and be in great shape. A someone else pointed out, It's extremely unlikely I'd even be offered the card. I did some work for a stamp dealer, and he made more in the hour before the show opened than the rest of the day. Paid me really well, as me setting up freed him to make more deals. There was some stuff he bought and flipped in that hour that never even made it back to the table. And stuff that never saw retail as it was intended for other dealer at the next weeks show. But lets say I have the money, and am offered the card. If I could inspect it in person, yes, I might buy it. The only difference between buying that and buying stuff in my range like 52Topps commons in similar grades is that the picture is different and it costs more. Of course I'd examine it more closely than a cheaper card, but from a technical standpoint, it's the exact same decision. |
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Assuming I don't find anything that would keep it from being a 6, worst case, it comes back a 6 and I've paid full price and will have to wait a bit to flip it. (Or, if I happen to have that much to spend on cards not flip it.) Best case, it comes back a 7 and I have a slightly tougher choice, keep the bargain or flip it. I would be far less confident if it was a decision between a 7 and 8 and still less if it was between an 8 and 9. I totally get that hardly any cards of HOF players that are really nice will be offered ungraded. And if I was selling any of my better cards like that I'd probably get them graded. But they are out there, and not every situation is a purchase from a dealer. The only way to make it anymore as a collector without a nearly unlimited budget is to know more and have a good eye for things. It works better in other hobbies, where the difference between the cheap and expensive is in details that even most dealers don't bother to check for. |
But how would a raw 52 Mantle make it to the National at all? Why would it be there at the largest gathering of collectors and not be graded for maximum value? Seeing a raw 52 Mantle should be an immediate flag at any venue, most notably the National. There's no reason for it to be there other than it can't be graded.
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You need dark to use a blacklight. The National is an open bright place.
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The grading services have so influenced this hobby that even if you have a perfectly good unaltered and original raw card, you simply can't sell it without offering a deep discount. You are forced to get it graded whether you want to or not. The perception would be that it is altered and was rejected.
The graders have too much power. Power to the people! |
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I used my blackllght at the national (on photos), and I would have to go underneath a draped table to use it :) I assume many dealers won't let you do that with a Mantle :)
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Or for the McGyvers, rig up a 400 count-ish sized box with a black light and hole big enough for your cell phone camera. |
My old blacklight that I need to get working again was usable in a room that was sunlit but not brightly. I never tried it in direct bright light.
But the Versalume was a bit bulkier than the pocket ones that are common. |
Email from PWCC
I received the mass email from PWCC with the following title:
Accepting Submissions, Deadline 7/10 - Noteworthy Cards On Display At National Convention I literally spit out the coffee I wasn't drinking |
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Thanks for all the replies.
Even though a few of you sort of brushed it off as "business as usual", and also many (rightfully so) added that the National might not be the best time to buy certain cards due to inflated prices...... It is also one of the few times for many people that they can see specific rare items ALL YEAR. I think we all knew that many people looking at higher end cards, (and I realize that means differing items/prices for all of us)...... many people looking at making higher end purchases were already bringing loupes, blacklights, and other items to help examine their purchases. I never thought it would be full on chaos this year LOL, but I can't help but think people using tools to examine their higher end purchases will be more prevalent this year because of recent events. I hope as the National approaches, a few of you could share your insight and your experiences this year, here in this thread for those of us that can't make it. Thanks again for the responses. :) |
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why not have a second option. Yeah maybe in the end get nothing but at least there are two chances instead of one. PSA has paid people for mistakes in grading. In the situations they have paid, i doubt the seller would of paid on them all if PSA didnt. |
I bought a raw Kalamazoo Bat card from a dealer at the 2006 National. He garunteed me it would grade as it had a slant cut. PSA turned it down saying it had been trimmed. I took it back to the dealer who promptly walked to the PSA booth and told them that they were all hand cut at the factory. They said, oh ok... bring it back and we will slab it. It recieved a 3 grade and everyone left happy.
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"Mike" drop |
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Are MLB players overpaid? Millions to play a game but NOT overpaid because the fans buy the product "Mike" drop |
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He is basically talking about in the long run. Some are legit but its an unwise gamble. Some people win in vegas, most lose..... |
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"I was a 3 bird a day pusstycat before I found BA". BA can help you. |
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Wonder if you could make a killing selling black lights and loupes at the show
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If psa graders can’t spot doctored cards in the comfort of their offices, with all the tools and gadgets, I’m not sure that some dude with a black light and pocket magnifying glass is going to be single-handedly uncovering rampant fraud at the National.
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I've never bought a graded card nor will I ever. I'm a collector not an investor and this is my hobby, so I have no need for over priced/graded cards to put in my portfolio. In my opinion graded cards have made it more difficult for set builders like myself to complete sets with nice, ungraded cards. How will I ever find a decent condition 52 Mantle, which is ungraded, to finish the set? Not likely to happen and I believe graded cards have had a negative impact on the hobby for collectors. |
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WOW..Blast From The Past....
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We were visiting on a camping trip and stopped in a casino to go to the buffet. (All you can eat, so in a way I "won" too being a hungry high school kid. especially at the soft serve ice cream dispenser:) ) Someone hit a dollar slot for more than he could carry, and my brother being 8 followed along picking up the dropped silver dollars. Security got involved. They brought over the winner, still carrying an armload of coins, and gave dad a lecture about letting his kid steal. letting was a stretch, none of us even knew. About 30 seconds into the lecture the guy asked "how much did the kid get? My brother showed him 2 fistfuls of dollars, around $11 which isn't bad for an 8 year old. The guy was like " you brought me all the way over here for $11?! let the kid keep it! and walked away to cash in his dollars. |
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