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View Poll Results: Am I unethical if I? SEE THREAD FOR COMPLETE QUESTION | |||
Bend corners back |
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29 | 19.46% |
Rub off wax with panty hose |
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17 | 11.41% |
Erase pencil marks |
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51 | 34.23% |
Soak cards to remove glue, dirt or stains |
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42 | 28.19% |
Use acetone to remove ink or grime |
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96 | 64.43% |
Use other chemicals to clean and/or brighten card |
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110 | 73.83% |
Fix creases and/or pinholes with Kurt's magic spray |
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118 | 79.19% |
Use a black marker on the corners of my 1971 Topps |
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138 | 92.62% |
Trim off the fuzzy edges of the card |
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122 | 81.88% |
BONUS: Am I unethical if I submit my work to PSA and they grade it |
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77 | 51.68% |
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 149. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1
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The base question for this poll is:
If I "improve" one of my cards and put it up for sale in the BST section here without disclosing the "work" I did on it, by doing one of the things listed, would you consider that to be "unethical". This is a multiple choice poll, so pick as many as items as you like. If you pick one of the items, that means you think that by me doing that to my card and putting it up for sale, that I am being unethical. If you think it is okay, then don't pick that item. The last question is a bonus question, which asks if I would still be unethical if my "work" was submitted to PSA (again, without disclosure) and PSA gave the card a clean grade. P.S. This poll is anonymous, you will not be "outed". Last edited by Gorditadogg; 03-22-2024 at 08:54 AM. |
#2
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Another question, for those who are sharp enough tonlook and find these things: do any of these conditions return or deteriorate over time, say, the next 20 years?
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T206 156/518 second time around R312 49/50 1959 Topps 568/572 1958, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1957, 1956… ...whatever I want |
#3
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I think what we already see in the poll what will be the prevailing thoughts going forward. There will always (it's some kind of scientific law) be naysayers. Happy collecting...
I feel the need for a card that could be an 8 in the wrong hands.. ![]()
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 03-21-2024 at 12:46 PM. |
#4
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I vote "All of the Above" is unethical, assuming we're referring to selling or trading the card to someone else without disclosure of the alteration (or "restoration," "improvement," "cleaning," "wiping," "sprucing," or whatever phrase you like).
As for the PSA question, someone suggested in the previous thread that the card is whatever the PSA label says it is. I strongly disagree, and I'll use Fritsch W512 prints as an example. Because PSA dabbles in incompetence, it has slabbed a number of obvious Fritsch prints as original W512 strip cards. ![]() Getting a lazy PSA grader to put "1926 W512" on the label doesn't magically transform an ersatz Ruth into an original one. Let's say I knowingly submitted the above Fritsch print to PSA, and PSA slabbed it as a W512 Grade 1. If I sold it to someone without disclosing that it's really a Fritsch print, then I committed fraud. Bless your shriveled black heart if you're willing to give me a pass in that scenario, but the reality is that you're a scumbag enabling another scumbag. |
#5
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Many of these methodologies were completely unknown to me, as a buyer ignorance is bliss I surmise. I’m going to use an eraser and remove these from my memory, just need the Men in Black!
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#6
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I clicked the boxes for everything, but some of these are pretty minor in the category of "unethical".
Ultimately this is incredibly simple, but I know this group will bend itself into a pretzel to justify whatever is or may eventually be profitable. The average American types at somewhere around 40 WPM, apparently. "Rubbed off wax", "erased pencil mark", "removed ink with acetone", "Kurts spray for pinhole". These take literally less than 3 seconds to type into your listing. Why would you folks not just be open and honest? Far more time and effort is spent coming up with why things should not be disclosed than it would take to just spend less than 3 seconds to disclose it. The question is rhetorical, obviously it's because we want to stretch as much as we can to justify profitable things and pretend it's just too complicated or somehow ethical to not disclose rather than the obvious. I am quite hard pressed to think of a case in the world where a lack of disclosure in a transaction is the ethical path and where people without a vested interest would by and large vote for that. It's the opposite, and we all know that when we aren't trying to justify things to boost values or make more money for ourselves or our friends. |
#7
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Rub off wax with panty hose
I had never heard of this before today. Might be a reason for some us to search out an old school undergarment wearing significant other. And I wonder if this panty hose method works for ear wax? Brian |
#8
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I've seen it done on occasion. It was the only box I did not check.
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Be sure to subscribe to my YouTube Channel, The Stuff Of Greatness. New videos are uploaded every week... https://www.youtube.com/@tsogreatness/videos |
#9
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. || || \/ If you want a deal, you might not get a card. If you want a card, you might not get a deal. |
#10
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If you treat cards as nothing more than currency, then I suppose it's a distinction without a difference. |
#11
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Yes, that's a big question with graded cards. If you trim a card and send it to PSA to launder it, and PSA grades it a 7, is it still trimmed? Or is it now a clean 7?
Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
#12
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If you trim a card and send it to PSA, it's still a trimmed card, regardless of the label that PSA slaps on it. As an aside, I find it amusing that people often repeat the mantra, "Buy the card, not the slab," suggesting that the card is the actual product and the slab is just a plastic vessel that someone slapped a number on. But when we're talking about card doctoring, the conversation quickly morphs into a philosophical discussion over whether the slab is the product, and the card itself is just window dressing. |
#13
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I'm guessing that we've got the majority of votes in now. Kind of fascinating to see how they line up.
Basically 3 big groupings here: -Activities that almost everyone is okay with -Activities that most people are okay with -Activities that the vast preponderance of people are not okay with Pantyhose falls into the category of activities that almost everyone is okay with, with only 9% reporting it as unethical. Bending corners back, erasing pencil marks, and soaking cards to remove glue, dirt, or stains falls into the bucket of activities that most people are okay with, with around 20-33% reporting it as unethical. And finally, most everyone seems to think that the rest are highly unethical, as they line up with 74-95% reporting it as unethical. The application of black marker to a 71T takes the cake with 95%+ reporting it as unethical. Even more excitingly, right in the middle at 57%, almost half of us find no ethical conundrum with getting PSA to grade improved cards. Some of this could be driven by the fact that it probably depends on whether we're talking about submitting any of them, or all of them. For example, I'm guessing that some portion of respondents who find pantyhose acceptable are also fine with taking the card so hosed by panties and submitting it to PSA, and ergo declined to check the PSA box. Of course, some of the responses to the bonus question could also be driven by basic antipathy towards PSA in general - anyone who buys slabs certified by a perfectly imperfect TPG deserves what they get, so caveat emptor and all that.
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Trying to wrap up my master mays set, with just a few left: 1968 American Oil left side 1971 Bazooka numbered complete panel Last edited by raulus; 03-22-2024 at 11:10 AM. |
#14
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I think it's a bit funny that there is a group of around 10-15% of responders as of now that are perfectly ok with trimming, using nail polish remover, random chemicals with unknown results (especially when the resulting chemicals are trapped in a plastic tomb with the card to air out for years), and press out creases with Kurt's magic rollers but using a sharpie on a 71' Topps...well that's just over the line buddy!
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- Justin D. Player collecting - Lance Parrish, Jim Davenport, John Norlander. Successful B/S/T with - Highstep74, Northviewcats, pencil1974, T2069bk, tjenkins, wilkiebaby11, baez578, Bocabirdman, maddux31, Leon, Just-Collect, bigfish, quinnsryche...and a whole bunch more, I stopped keeping track, lol. |
#15
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Sent from my SM-S906U using Tapatalk |
#16
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If it's not perfectly centered, I probably don't want it. |
#17
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I checked all the boxes. I'm curious why anyone would want to restore a card to begin with, unless it's purely for the $ value. Pencil marks, glue, etc are all a part of the card's journey through the decades.
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#18
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I could see someone wanting to restore a card for OCD reasons. But the Venn diagram of people who obsess over a card's appearance and people who resell those cards without disclosure seems to be a full circle.
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#19
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And equally importantly, how well they have survived the journey (or not) should determine their relative value -- not the skill of a card doctor/restorer/whatever. It means something if a 100 year old card has actually survived in, say, near mint condition. It means nothing if someone is able to doctor it to make it look near mint.
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 03-23-2024 at 10:59 AM. |
#20
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#21
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Well stated. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro |
#22
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Wouldn't the erasure of a pencil mark also be part of the card's journey?
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#23
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Erasing, trimming, and soaking are all part of the card's journey, but only if you can tell that they occured. In each of those cases though the idea is to conceal or remove the card's imperfections. But yes, if you could tell that there was once pencil on the back of a card and that someone had attempted to erase it, that would certainly be a part of the card's history and journey. A card that has been soaked, trimmed and erased has had its 100+ year journey removed, and is now essentially a 21st century card in my eyes. I completely understand your point, but I tend to think of cleaning cards the same way coin collectors frown on cleaning coins.
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#24
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#25
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