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Since the SGC news, results from trying to cross a SGC card to PSA
Title says it all. Recently, anyone tried to cross a SGC card to PSA. If so, what was the result? Same grade, higher grade, lower grade? How long did the process take? I would think PSA has been inundated with questions/crosses since the news, but I haven’t seen any posts about it.
I am planning to trying crossing a few cards soon and will let you know the results. |
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Has anyone made observations to the contrary? |
I'm considering the exact opposite (converting PSA to SCG before the superior slabs go away). SGC graded cards just stand out and look much better inside the black frames. And PSA's crinkled baggies don't do it for me either. Nor does the diagonal placement within the slabs.
Hope PSA doesn't ruin a good thing and do away with the nice SCG Slabs, and/or increase their processing times. |
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Minority view at least in the "enclave" but I don't own a single SGC (or Beckett) card I wouldn't prefer in an equal grade PSA holder.
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This not directly related to the cross over question but while setting up at the Philly and Chicago shows, I saw no negative effect on SGC sales and prices, as I sold SGC cards as normal.
I was surprised that I heard nothing negative from any customer about it. In fact I heard very few people mention it at all. |
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What has it been, a week? Maybe two?
The only way you’d have grades by now is if you paid for one of the highest levels of service, which would set you back some serious bread. |
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True, I just thought some members would have started the process and maybe some would have feedback but now. |
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I truly believe a lot of Vintage Pre War Collectors prefer Sgc over PSA due to their graciousness on lower collector grade condition cards. Many low grade below 4’s, broadly speaking receive more of a favorable grade then lower Grade PSA examples.
If your monetary value is the most import sure PSA all the way if not SGC is fine, I’m talking lower collector grade. |
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We are Still in the "denial" phase evidently. At least there was, and never will be (least for older slabs) a registry. This, IMO, wouldbhave caused a little more panic.
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And if you crack first and then submit, then you're taking a huge gamble. Will they refuse to slab it? Will it have some minsize issue? And that's before you even get to the time and cost involved in submitting to PSA. I'm going to guess that around these parts, there's a lot fewer people who are eager to dump their SGC slabs and get them into shiny new PSA slabs. Not that it will stop us from hypothesizing and pontificating that such a person must be out there somewhere, and if enough of them exist, then it must mean something for the market for SGC slabs. |
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While I agree, more.people tend to complain about overgrading... raw cards on ebay and the like ;) |
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As you hinted at, I’m not sure how many people want to get frisky with that by spending all that cash and waiting months just to be told they’re SOL, because it doesn’t meet that minimum. I guess the good news is that your card comes back in the original holder. |
There are more important data points to consider than just whether it was in an SGC slab before and what the grade is. Knowing when the card was graded by SGC and why it received the grade it did (e.g., due to corner wear, centering, surface wear, creases, etc) are more predictive if whether or not it will cross than just blindly assuming the reason it did or didn't cross is because of the current state of the hobby or an inherent bias to one's "team".
The fact remains, if your SGC grade is due to corner wear, it's unlikely to cross to PSA. If it's due to centering, it can often bump at PSA. If it's due to creases or surface wear, there's more variance from one grader to the next, it could go either way. |
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I'm guessing that's rare, but I've only once attempted submitting without cracking first. I crossed this card from SGC 6 to PSA 5, without cracking it out. Would it have scored higher if I had cracked it out first? Hard to say, but I wasn't willing to take the chance. And with this particular issue, the grade isn't particularly important anyway. |
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Yours might get a 6 from a different grader on a different day. There's a lot of variance, especially with PSA. They're looking at that top left corner and the registration misalignment. That's what is causing the 5. But some PSA graders will call it a 6. Just not as many as will call it a 5. |
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