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#1
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Posted By: dan mckee
IDIOTS! PSA GRADERS ARE IDIOTS! |
#2
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Posted By: jay behrens
Just a quick question, are you sure you are seeing the same card being auctioned several times? I haven't been following this Hermansk thing close, but if there really are as many mislabeled cards as what you ahve been posting, then there really is a serious knowledge problem over at PSA |
#3
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Posted By: Brian H.
Isn't this flogging a dead horse.... I have had cards badly mislabelled by both PSA and SGC -- they will both fix it promptly for free and with apologies. |
#4
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Posted By: jay behrens
In some professions there is no room for error. Although mislabeling a card is not a life or death error like a surgeon can make, errors like the Hermanski are errors that should never be made if you have knowledgeable employees. |
#5
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Posted By: Nixon
EDITORIAL: in my opinion, grading is stupid and grading "experts" are phonies. Trimmed cards are being graded. Cards are being mislabeled. Subjective numbers are being assigned to cardboard -- and some people eat it up, and part with way too much cash in exchange for what? Not a card. Not history. Nope. They buy a number. Great. Someone looks at cardboard and assigns a number to it? Give me a break. "Grading" is smoke and mirrors. It's fiction. Wake up. |
#6
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Posted By: Ben
NIXON = Post of the year!!! |
#7
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Posted By: Lee Behrens
I kind of look at it as paying for a holder to protect the card and if by chance I decide to sell the card it will get more money than when raw. It is still a very nice holder to protect your cards. I collect those T202s and it is tough to find a good way to store them other then slabbing them. |
#8
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Posted By: runscott
If you were thinking about opening a coffee shop, but couldn't find anyone who knew how to brew a good cup of coffee, would you do it? The answer is obvious. But...if you could find a bunch of idiots who were willing to pay a lot of money for a bad cup of coffee in a really attractive cup, you might open your shop anyway. This board has a lot of people who will defend a bad cup of coffee to the death. |
#9
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Posted By: Nixon
Before PSA, SGC, GAI, and so on, collectors managed to safely store their cards without having them entombed. I don't need PSA to protect my cards. Before grading services, collectors managed to educate themselves to recognize the fake from the real, the trimmed from the intact. I don't need some self- proclaimed "expert" to tell me what's good and what's not. And if protection is all there is to it, why does everyone insist that grading services give their cards numbers? Let's face it: advocates of grading services fall into three categories: the first is the grading companies that make money; and the second are the sellers who make money by taking advantage of the third group -- card buyers whose gut level appreciation of a card isn't the player, the card, or the history, but the number assigned to it by that self-proclaimed expert. The folks in groups one and two I respect; they're just making as much money as they can, and that's great. It's the folks in group three who are the chumps. |
#10
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Posted By: jay behrens
Nixon, got a real name to with your handle? |
#11
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Posted By: Nixon
Oh really? Then here's a challenge for you all, new collectors and old: the next time you send a card into a slabbing service just because it looks so pretty in the big plastic holder, tell the service to slab the card, but not to grade it. Think you can do it? Will you do it? If you won't because you think you can sell graded cards for a profit, great, I respect that. Go for it. But if the card's a keeper since you're a "collector" and you still get it graded, then be honest: you collect numbers first, and cards second. If that's you, admit it and back away from the folly: get your card slabbed, but tell the grading service to keep their "grade" to themselves. |
#12
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Nixon, chill a bit. We all get your point: collecting should be a pure endeavor and not driven by money, etc. I don't know about the rest of the people on this board, but I've never purchased a card in my life with the thought of flipping it for a profit--or ever selling it in my lifetime. I am self-employed in a field far from card collecting. Nevertheless, I dare say that my personal collection is probably worth as much as anyone's on this board. I rarely buy graded cards if they're from the 50s on because I can usually tell on ebay if a card is damaged. If I can't see the card well enough, I'll just take a pass. Nevertheless, I've spent four figures on a number of cards (T206s, etc.) and I'll be damned if I'm going to buy it raw. The cleverness of the thieves on ebay and elsewhere make it very difficult to determine in a scan if a card has been tampered with. And with an objective third party grading company (except Pro of course), I at least have a better chance of knowing that I'm not throwing money down a rat hole. As for getting my personal cards graded, I have little interest as I will never sell my collection. But at age 38, I won't live forever and I would like to leave my collection to my kids in good shape. Therefore, occasionally I will get a very expensive card graded that I purchased raw just to protect it for future generations who may not be as insane as I am about the hobby. Your argument about the companies simply assigning numbers to cardboard has merit; however, you should also go to the bank and complain to the tellers about why your pile of bills with 1s on them are worth less than the ones assigned with the number 100; after all, it's just the same paper... |
#13
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Posted By: Lee Behrens
My most recent conversation with SGC involved exactly what you were talking about, putting a card in the holder without the grade. I brought this up to them because of them returning ungradable cards unslabbed. I asked why they could not at least holder them without a label. I was told it was not a practice of there. Also if you read my earlier thread you will find that I pointed out that I like the holders but if it comes to selling time it certainly helps. |
#14
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Posted By: david
i am in the same boat when i comes to slabbing my cards. for the most part i submit all my cards to sgc because i like the way they look in the holder. in most cases sgc has specials where you can slab your cards for 5-10 dollars and the cards wind up looking much better then they would for paying 2 dollars for a screw down and replacing them ever few years because they look like garbage. |
#15
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Posted By: jay behrens
Nixon, the questions still stands, what is your real name? We love to have new people join the board, but at the same time, if you are not willing to back up what you say with real name, then you end up getting your posts deleted. |
#16
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Posted By: MW
Nixon, |
#17
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Posted By: runscott
Each morning I go down to the stream and fill my pitcher with honey, which I eat along with some manna that is delivered each day straight from heaven. |
#18
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Posted By: jay behrens
LMAO!!! Would she be able to to that dress on one arm? I think a leg would be out of the question. |
#19
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Like them or not the reputable slabbers add a great deal of stability to the buying and selling of cards. I am one of those obnoxious types who goes over every card I buy with a light and magnifier and I am perfectly willing to send back misgraded items. I used to return so many of my mail order purchases that I simply refused to buy through the mail at all for quite some time. With SGC and to some extent PSA and GAI, I can buy valuable cards through the mails and through ebay without worrying about the basic condition issues that made buying such a crap shoot. Do they make occasional errors? yes (in PSA'S case Yes+). Is it better than it was 10 years ago? Absolutely. The slabbers add value to the cards because they make them more fungible. I wish money was not an issue in cards, but it is. When you spend thousands a year on cards, money is a factor in every decision. Pollyana attitudes just don't cut it. |
#20
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Posted By: Jay Miller
I'm with Brian H. --enough of the whineing about some grading service or other making a mistake. We all realize they are not perfect. Time to get a life. |
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