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  #1  
Old 01-11-2016, 11:56 AM
jsq jsq is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2015
Posts: 60
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you mention loupe and black light to determine if a card has been tampered with. i vaguely recall reading in another collectible paper area that a black light worked extremely well to detect doctoring of the paper.

could someone elaborate if this is accurate with baseball cards? and specifically how effective it is?

also, does the the black light pick up on these same anamolies inside a slab?

and do the grading companies use a black light on all higher end value cards?

just wanting to understand,

thanks
jsq


Quote:
Originally Posted by chipperhank44 View Post
As a collector with a limited budget, I have found that the only way to close the gap is with hard work. My strategy is as follows:

Rule #1: Don't look for cards in the same places as high rollers (Heritage, REA, etc.) Look at smaller auction houses and grind out garage/estate sales.

Rule #2: Search more often and with less precision. Grind out ebay searches. Be the first one to see that steal of a BIN. Or be the only one who grinds out a search as generic as "old baseball card" or "vintage baseball". Everyone can search "Ty Cobb", not everyone (especially not your high roller competition) will grind through thousands of listings to find that one special card with no player name in the listing.

Rule #3: Be knowledgeable enough to buy ungraded cards. If you know your stuff you can buy ungraded and cut your competition in half (especially those high rollers who only buy graded). Never leave home without a loupe and a black light.

Last edited by jsq; 01-11-2016 at 11:56 AM.
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  #2  
Old 01-11-2016, 12:13 PM
Rookiemonster's Avatar
Rookiemonster Rookiemonster is offline
Dustin
Dustin Mar.ino
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Nj
Posts: 1,451
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I was able to spend the most Money I ever spent on a card last year . It was to obtain my Grail 🏆. I did it by literally saving my change and selling things on Ebay. It took years ! At first , But once I applied the method of save and sell I got what wanted ( 1951 Bowman willie Mays psa 2) .

The only regret ? I focused so hard on it I wouldn't buy any other card or pack . I passed up so many great deals I seen along the way .

The brights side ? I feel like I have new life and buy little cheap cards I like or even 50 to 80 dollar cards ( from time to time ) . I don't feel guilty like man I could be saving for _________ . You fill in the blank lol .


So I gave my self some time before I focused on the next card on the list .

Last edited by Rookiemonster; 01-11-2016 at 12:15 PM.
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  #3  
Old 01-11-2016, 01:19 PM
ALR-bishop ALR-bishop is offline
Al Richter
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Default out bid

When outbid I tend to think, thank goodness some idiot outbid me on that and saved me all that money
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  #4  
Old 01-13-2016, 10:12 AM
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cammb cammb is offline
Tony. Biviano
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ALR-bishop View Post
When outbid I tend to think, thank goodness some idiot outbid me on that and saved me all that money
+1
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  #5  
Old 01-11-2016, 12:22 PM
Laxcat Laxcat is offline
M.att C H A R L T O N
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Location: Austin
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jsq View Post
you mention loupe and black light to determine if a card has been tampered with. i vaguely recall reading in another collectible paper area that a black light worked extremely well to detect doctoring of the paper.

could someone elaborate if this is accurate with baseball cards? and specifically how effective it is?

also, does the the black light pick up on these same anamolies inside a slab?

and do the grading companies use a black light on all higher end value cards?

just wanting to understand,

thanks
jsq

Here is pic of a black light. I think paper made after a certain year has whitening agents added. The newer stuff will "glow" under UV light. The Comiskey is an a16 and the Morrell is a 1972 TCMA reprint.
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