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Old 06-01-2020, 06:40 PM
Ronnie73 Ronnie73 is offline
Ron Kornacki - Uncle Nacki
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Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Connecticut
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Demand and popularity is always going to drive the prices up. T206 is probably one of the most common pre-war issues and preforms much better than many other issues that are many times rarer. T205's are probably right behind T206's when it comes to demand and popularity. You'd probably be shocked at the number of fully active T202 collectors, compared to T205's and T206 collectors. I like the idea of more card surface and players should carry more value compared to a smaller single player card, and they would, but this time the T202's are not winning a popularity contest. Collectors like a longer challenging checklist. They also like cards that are easier to display and store. Having most of the big star players at the time helped a lot too. As I mentioned before, it comes down to demand and popularity. Many would say supply, but I say no. There's a huge supply of T206's.

Another great example I always use is coins. I will talk about 2 different coins. One random coin and one not. One of the most popular US coins is the 1909-S VDB penny. Literally anyone that has ever started a penny collection knows about this penny and the steel cent made of copper in 1943. The 1909-S VDB is so popular, that David Hall's son once said he'd eat worms to get one for his penny collection. I don't know if he ever did.

The 1909-S VDB Penny had a mintage of 484,000.
An estimated 50,000 still exist today.
The circulated value ranges from $806 to $1800.

A 1859 Liberty Seated Half Dime had a mintage of 340,000.
144,000 less than the penny and it's 50 years older and made of silver.
There's currently an estimated 850 coins that still exist today.
The circulated value ranges from $19 to $230.
So it's 58 times more rare than the penny and you can get 42 of them for the same price as one penny.

I use the same type of comparing numbers when talking about new shiny manufactured rarities. It's not about supply but when you know the way the numbers stack up, you have the ability to build an extremely rare collection of something for a fraction of the cost. Something you can truly be proud of. Not something you collect because everyone else collects the same thing.
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Ron - Uncle Nacki

T206 Master Monster Front/Back Set Collector - www.youtube.com/unclenacki
T206 Basic "The Monster" Set 514/524
T206 Advanced "Master Monster" Front/Back Set ????/5258
COMPLETE T206 BACK SUBSETS
Old Mill Southern Leagues - Black Ink 48/48
Sweet Caporal 350-460 Factory 30 Full Color "No Prints" 28/28
NEAR COMPLETE T206 BACK SUBSETS
Polar Bear 245/250
Sovereign 460 50/52
Sweet Caporal 150 Factory 649 Overprint 31/34
Piedmont 350 "Elite 11" 9/11


Last edited by Ronnie73; 06-01-2020 at 06:43 PM.
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