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#1
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Posted By: TBob
Has anyone had any experience with his grading of vintage cards? I received a catalogue recently and although the prices were not cheap, there were some interesting caramel cards in it. The problem, to me, is that my idea of what is a G, GVG, VG or VGEX card might be quite different than the seller's. |
#2
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Posted By: Chris B.
Its a crapshoot with Larry and his grades, but he has a very fair return policy. I have bought cards from him several times -- kept some, and returned some as well with no problem. If he has something you really want, its worth a try IMO. |
#3
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Posted By: leon
I just sent money for about 6 cards to him. He grades 1-3 grades high (usually) for what is considered today standards. If you think of it as 2 grades high you will be close. I have bought from him numerous times and each and every time returned 40%-50% of what I bought. No hassles on the returns....good luck (your 150 series is in the mail)... |
#4
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Posted By: brian p
They are very loose on grading--the majority of the cards I have received over the years I feel were overgraded by a 1/2 to a full grade. Being a lower grade collector, I have never minded much, and the return policy is good, so it is worth trying them if you really want a card and are willing to pay the price. |
#5
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Posted By: Jason
Just like every other vintage dealer I know he is way overpriced and grades about 1-3 grades higher. |
#6
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I have bought a ton of caramels from him over the past year. Unfortunately for me, and my attempts to complete E101 and Dockman sets, I have had to return around 50%. No problems with returns - usually get an apology letter from Larry and the receipt where he refunded my credit card. 95% of his grades are AT LEAST 2-3 grades high! |
#7
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Posted By: dstudeba
I hope to never have to buy from him again. I got a card graded G/VG that had a 1.5 inch tear in the middle of it. Unfortunately I didn't open the package until after the return time had expired. |
#8
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Posted By: runscott
I hear the "old school" collectors complain about slabbing and longing for the "good old days" when you could simply trust your card-collecting buddy dealers to accurately grade the items you purchased from them by mail. But whenever one of these guys comes up for discussion on the board, everyone either clams up or says the dealer in question over-grades. Is over-grading a new phenomenon among these guys? |
#9
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
Even with their mistakes, at least the three top grading companies (PSA, GAI and SGC) aren't wrong 100% of the time in the dealer's favor! In fact, over half the time (unless a major auction house submitted the card), they tend to undergrade in the collector's favor! |
#10
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Posted By: JimB
Scotts, Thank you for making an important and infrequently stated reminder of what it was like most of the time buying cards from dealers before third party grading. Yes, third party graders make mistakes, but I would guess that about 95% of the time I agree with their assessments. That is a much higher percentage than it seems people agree with most dealers on ungraded cards. And to a large extent they have standardized grading in a way that did not exist before. People have a much clearer idea of what an ex card is like or vg card, regardless of whether or not it is in a holder. Don't get me wrong, I buy a lot of ungraded cards (in person at shows and at shops), but in dealing through the mail, I find it frustrating most of the time unless I know the dealer well. |
#11
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Posted By: Gary B.
Pretty much all baseball card shops or online sellers (not auctions) tend to be so highly priced to begin with, but when you take into consideration that if they say excellent you have to assume it's very good, and if they say very good you have to consider it's good, then it just becomes a waste of time for me. At least on ebay you can usually see a scan, and even if there are slight imprefections that the scan doesn't catch and the description doesn't mention, I've rarely been dissapointed, especially considering what I'm paying. Card shows are of course great in that you get to see the card in person, but good deals there can often be hard to come by, but the good news is you can often haggle for a reasonable price. I sure wish I could buy cards at bb card shops or through online vendors, but it's the VERY rare exception that I see a desired item at anything close to what I consider to be a reasonable price - sorry! |
#12
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Posted By: Gary B.
I've also found that Net54 is an excellent way to buy things since like ebay you're buying from collectors, or even when you're buying from dealers, they generally are not completely out of touch with reality, meaning they know what something is worth, but more importantly, what a decent, reasonable price is in a range people will actually pay. Just because something books for $400, if it sells on ebay in the $175-$200 range, I just won't pay $400 when I know I can do better - it's just not realistic. |
#13
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Posted By: Jerry Spillman
Completely agree with the comments made on this thread of the over-graded vintage cards sold by Fritsch. In my experience it was an average of 2 grades higher than the recognized standards of today. |
#14
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Posted By: Todd
Saw some scarce cards in Fritsch's one-of-a kind catalogue, priced at 3-4 times nm book. Forget the book on this issue I thought/think. Still, the cards are graded by him as vg-ex, ex or, in some cases ex+. I called and asked about grading, said I really didn't like creases, and was told that anything below ex+ might have creases. So do I pay in essence 8x book for a so-called ex+ card, which people here say would likely top out at least one grade less and probably more? |
#15
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
If there are not many cards which you are interested in, ask for an exact description (or gosh, a scan). If this is too much trouble, perhaps he is as well. |
#16
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Posted By: Howie
If they are scarce cards my guess the NM price in the price guide is a joke, and the condition typically found is VG, and even that will sell for many multiples of book price for grade. Don't confuse a high price with overgrading. The price may be right for the card but the dealer's grade or overgrading of the card may be off. Grading standards vary from dealer to dealer and with each grading company. None of them are always right or wrong because it comes down to applying your own standards when looking at the card, and figuring what it's worth to you. If somebody grades differently than you, learn their standards and buy accordingly. The only bad dealer in a circumstance like this is one with a no return policy. You can call yourself an expert grader but customers are the final judge, and their standards are all over the place. |
#17
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Posted By: runscott
The dealers know what they are, we know what they are. The complaint is over dealers trying to skim a little extra by over-grading and hoping they don't get asked for a return. You can be certain that when the dealer buys the cards, they know the standard hobby grades and do their dealing based on that. |
#18
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Posted By: hankron
You know there's a problem when a dealer has two grading criteria, one for buying and one for selling. |
#19
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Posted By: john/z28jd
I think the problem with saying Fritsch is trying to make extra by overgrading is most of the old cards he has hes had for a long time.I have a 12 year old catalogue from him with the same cards and prices as his current catalogue,and i mean the exact card not just a different copy of it.It might be true for other people but not him,im willing to bet on some cards hes making 5000 percent profits on them,which is nice unless it takes 20 years to make that profit |
#20
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Posted By: DD
John, |
#21
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Posted By: mike
This thread is informative. And interesting. Ah yes, the old generosity in the selling grade and misery in buying grade. |
#22
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Posted By: taslegal
still, what's interesting in my situation is that Larry had these m101-6s for sale now and in his last one-of-a-kind catalog. Google search 101-6 and you can see the last catalogue ad for these. He moved roughly half of them from last time until now. He must have sold more than he thought he would, and thereby thought he had cheated himself,because he now has actually RAISED the price on many of those that didn't sell the first time. Interesting strategy, although its his choice to make, and he's been doing this long enough that far be it for me to tell him how to run his business. |
#23
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Specifics: I returned a big chunk of what I ordered, kept the rest. I receive the catalogyue all the time, I never ordered again. I guess it depends on your point of view: if you are paying the grade price you are bound to be disappointed; if you are paying a very low price, not. |
#24
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Posted By: Tbob
They really helped. I decided to pass because the prices quoted for the caramel cards were a little pricey at the grade given, they are certainly overpriced for a grade or two lower and I'd hate to see a VG card wind up as a G or even worse. |
#25
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Posted By: Julie
to them that even when I called to find out what a Colgans they had really LOOKED like, the people answering the phones weren't where the cards were. I got a personal note from Fritsch saying "Why don't you send me a list of those you have, and I will suggest some we have in stock that might interest you. OBOY! (Fritsch personally has the biggest Colgans collection on earth, and often sells them in his one-of-a-kind catalogue). So I laborously copied the names and teams of all the Colgans i had--maybe about a hundred, or a few more, at the time, and sent them to Larry Fritsch. Two months later I got a short note from him saying "sorry, i don't need any of these cards." I even WROTE on the list why I was sending it, and reminding him of his earlier note. |
#26
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
too busy buying T206 Doyle variations for micropennies on the dollar???? |
#27
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Posted By: murcerfan
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#28
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Posted By: dennis
but really funny! |
#29
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Nice card, but prove the point: both overgraded |
#30
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Posted By: Julie
unlike the previous one--so--did you have something to say to me about someone else's cards? |
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