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#251
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Posted By: Rich Klein
250 |
#252
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Someone rebacked an E Wagner with a T206 back. It was proven to be a fake; I am not sure if it was soaked but they did determine that i was a rebacked card. |
#253
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Posted By: sagard
I thought it was either a brown or a red Hindu with a front that was not possible with the front. Someone will know for sure. |
#254
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Posted By: Glyn Parson
I am astonished at the sure stupidity of some of the posters on the psa board. They honestly think PSA is catching all of this doctoring. They (PSA) have no clue anymore. I have talked to several card doctors and they all have told me how easy it now is to get bad cards through. I have been a psa submitter since 1992 but I will not buy anything for my own collection in a psa holder unless I can hold it in my hand before paying. I've known Dave Forman for a long time, about 15 years now, and I know he is far more knowledgable then everyone at PSA combined. Their is actually a moron on those boards singing the praises of Joe Orlando as such a great card expert. He was at best a midlevel collector before working for psa, and he can be lucky Baker and Rocchi left or he would be a no name still. There is also a buffoon (sp?) that keeps stating how stupid the collectors on this board are. I dont post often on either board but know that the people over here know a He11 of a lot more about cards and what is really going on out there then the bulk of the PSa board posters. |
#255
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Posted By: joe brennan
I was told more than once that the founders of this hobby used to soak T206's and other cards out of scapbooks by throwing them in bath tubs full of water and letting them float up. I'm sure most of the paste came off also. If this practice was deemed ok by the founding fathers, why is such a stink being made of it by collectors 60-70 years later? You going to tell Jefferson Burdick (if he was alive) that he's a card doctor and what he did was wrong? Just because the value has increased and there are criminals doing other things to the cards to increase doesn't mean that soaking paper or glue off is a crime too. Collecting habits and preserving cards practices have vastly improved from scrap books. Actually the paper is far more harmful to the card if left on than removed. If left on the acids in the old paper and cardboard will eat away the card, virtually destroying it over time. You are not altering by removing it, you are preserving it in its original statefor many generations to come. Just think off all the T206 PSA 7's and 8's that floating up to the top of that bathtub. You might thank them for their handy work, instead of standing on your soapbox and preaching drivel. Water does not change the structure of a card. |
#256
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Bob, |
#257
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Perhaps Bobby could quantify this with an actual number, but I would venture to guess that the weekly volume and dollar amount of low to mid-grade cards sold on eBay would come pretty close to the total annual volume and dollar amount of high-grade material sold by any single auction house. I'd bet that within the first quarter of the year, eBay sells more dollars in low and mid-grade vintage material than all the auction houses combined sell in high-grade cards in an entire year. I'd be shocked if I were off-base in that guess. |
#258
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Al, |
#259
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Posted By: barrysloate
The price disparity between a PSA-8 card and the same one in good or very good condition is so great that there really is no reason to compare them. They are apples and oranges. The only similarity is each has a picture of a baseball player on it. |
#260
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
It's an interesting debate, I think. I try and envision what the hobby would be like if the bottom fell out of either segment, and I think they're both so interdependent that I think either way, it would hurt the hobby. |
#261
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Barry, |
#262
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Posted By: Brian Weisner
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#263
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Posted By: Trevor Hocking
Ok I gave in a read this whole thing. I am a third generation collector and I still have a good chunk of my Grandfathers cards that he opened right from the packs in the 30's and 40's and most of the other cards he got in trade from other hobby pioneers. Many collections we bought where placed in scrapbooks back in the day, hell Cracker Jacks, American Caramel, Goudey and Topps had ones you buy to PASTE them in. Half the fun of getting those old collections was trying to get the cards out in good shape and preserve them. There was no fraud in that nor did anyone card about it either. I guess there is a fine line of wait is universally accepted, accepted but not said out loud, and just plan out restoration. I for one believe that card soaking is ok in my book. Plus if you can't tell it was done then how would you know it was done at all? |
#264
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jim- I think the low to middle grade collector is alive and well and here to stay. The PSA-8 collectors are an elite group with a lot of money to spend on baseball cards. Nothing wrong with that, but 98% of the vintage collectors work within a budget and just can't afford them. When I collected many years ago I always went after the best grade I could. In those days an excellent card might cost $10 and a NR MT card might cost $20. Today, the gap has widened so that most collectors couldn't even aspire towards PSA-8. They can better allocate their available funds by buying more cards in middle grade. And I have to disagree with you and say that this group is the backbone of the hobby. The PSA-8 collectors may spend alot, but they are just a tiny percentage of the vintage crowd. |
#265
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Posted By: DJ
Jim, |
#266
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Barry, |
#267
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Posted By: JimCrandell
DJ, |
#268
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Jim: |
#269
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jim- you won't make a lot of friends on this board if you say the mid-grade collector is becoming unimportant, because that is how virtually everyone here collects. And I know the amount spent on PSA-8 material is huge, but that is because the cost of each of those cards is so great. This kind of reminds me of a well known joke: |
#270
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
So if Warren Buffett spends $500 million on a PSA4 T210 Joe Jackson will that make PSA4 Collectors the new "backbone" of the hobby? |
#271
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Posted By: Trevor Hocking
Hey Jim, |
#272
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Al, |
#273
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Trevor, |
#274
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Posted By: Trevor Hocking
No, see Jim I think this is where you are mistaken. For every Fogel, Louchios, Merkel and Spence there are 10 for each one of those great collectors who spend just as much if not more on P to ExMt cards. It's just hard to know when so many private deals happen on these semi rare to rare collections that never run through the auction circuit. I do think you are very knowledgeable to all the $ amounts being spent in the high grade card market but when it comes to raw and lower grade cards you are missing the mark. But like I said it really shouldn't matter who is spending wait, it should just matter that well all love the same cards, high grade or low. We should all hold the same respect for each kind of collector because we all love the same thing. |
#275
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Posted By: greg
"Not knocking the low grade collector--just saying that from a number of perspectives he is becoming a less important part of the hobby." |
#276
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Posted By: scott brockelman
A pitiful misguided fool that has no idea what he is talking about. |
#277
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Posted By: Patrick McHugh
Well in terms of high grade low grade here is my take. Besides a few of the mainstream sets ie. t206 etc. most of the sets collected by members on this board do not exhist in high grade. Heck just try to compleate a t207 or an m101-5 set in any grade very very tough to do. I can walk into the national and start from scratch and put together a 1958 topps set in psa 8 before the show is over-4 days. An m101-5 set may take you 4 years to finish and it will not be in psa 8 because you can not find non exhistent cards. So really apples are being compared to oranges. Everyone should enjoy what they collect that is the backbone of the hobby. |
#278
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Posted By: leon
edited to be nicer... |
#279
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Posted By: Trevor Hocking
I do have to leave for a bit tonight so I don't want to seem like I am ducking out of this good conversation. But what really matters here is a little respect for everyone including Jim. I also believe that the backbone of the hobby is the 11-16 old kids buying there first T206 because heck when we are gone they are the ones that are going to have the disposable income to buy our little pieces of cardboard joy |
#280
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Posted By: DJ
You hit on the head Trevor. The average collector who collects cards, why do they have to know who Fogel, Louchios or Merkel are? |
#281
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Posted By: scott brockelman
Jim has earned his disrespect, it comes from his arrogant, pompous, ill informed and condescending comments(did I leave any out?) to the majority of the collectors on this board. |
#282
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Trevor, |
#283
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Jim, I really don't understand why, but you are not listening to what people are saying to you. I (apparently along with many other people) just don't believe you when you say that more than half the vintage market action is tied up in PSA 8 or better(over and over and over...). You keep saying this as if you have stats to back it up, if you do, I (along with others) would love to see them. However, it seems that if you tell yourself something enough times, you start to believe it. Prove to all of us that you are right and we will let you be, but until then don't keep saying PSA 8's are more than 50% of the marketplace. Like others if you can prove it, I will be the first to eat crow. |
#284
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Posted By: JimCrandell
DJ, |
#285
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Rhett, |
#286
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Posted By: scott brockelman
I am laying it out for you exactly as you type it. I have no problem calling you out on it. If you can't say anything nice about the collectors and their collections on this board just shut up and quit telling us that PSA 8's are the backbone of the hobby and all the nonsensical horse **** that you try to back it up with. |
#287
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Posted By: Colt McClelland
Leon, |
#288
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Colt, |
#289
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Jim, we never said anything about the $$ sold by the largest dealers, you talked about total sales of vintage cards. Also, enough of this "i'm sure" and "in my opinion" stuff. Basically, all of that is meaningless. I could say in my opinion the sky is purple, but it would still be a lie. Give us facts or quit talking. |
#290
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Posted By: Colt McClelland
Jim, |
#291
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Just food for thought... If you think about sales being roughly equal (in #'s) amongst all grades proportionatly. (Ex. If for a particular card 10 cards exist as PSA 8's and 100 exist as 3's, if 30% were sold each year 3 PSA 8's, and 30 PSA 3's would have been sold) |
#292
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Rhett, |
#293
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
for someone who says they respect everyone equally, statements like "the low midgrade collector is becoming a less important part of the hobby" goes COMPLETELY against showing even the most modest amount of respect.....Not many people enjoy being told they are "less important". Typically not much of a term of respect. PSA8's are great. Beautiful cards. Maybe trimmed, soaked, whatever, but VISUALLY beautiful. It's great to see a lovely 1970 Milton Bradley set in PSA8. I would not, under any circumstances pay WAZOO prices for 1970 Milton Bradley's in PSA8 just to have another PSA8 set. Just not my bag. Fortunately for PSA and the registry gods, people do. And that's their right. Just like collecting psa3-5 complete T206 sets that MANY people on this board do. |
#294
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Jim, I don't think it is a streatch to think that the # of cards in each grade are sold proportionately to their populations. Do you have information that would say otherwise? |
#295
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Posted By: joe brennan
I keep hearing Auction house sales and high dollar cards. I'm sorry to disapoint you, but if you took a poll of Pre War collectors, 95% of the backbone of the hobby haven't ever bid on Auction House cardsnor will they ever be able too. 98% of all sales of pre war cards are funneled through e-bay. I don't have proof of the %'s but I bet I'm pretty close and that my friend Jim is the backbone of a hobby. The everyday run of the mill $200 a week x 50,000 strong population of collectors. Not the 10 people that keep trading high dollar card back and forth between them. Just call me Mr.Backbone from now on. |
#296
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
I could see how, if one spent a big portion of his card budget on major auctions, one would think that 8s and higher are the backbone of the hobby. |
#297
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Posted By: DJ
Perfect, Al. |
#298
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Posted By: Cobby33
. |
#299
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Posted By: Ryan Christoff
I say we give Jim a break. He just finished reading "How To Win Friends And Influence People" by Bruce Dorskind and is trying to put into action the valuable lessons he's just discovered. |
#300
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Posted By: Bob
Gee, just think, this all started with a question about whether or not a g/vg Zeenut could be soaked to remove back paper |
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