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#1
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Diamonds
Posted By: identify7
A diamond is a rare and precious commodity, particularly if it is near perfect and sized one carat and above. Particularly in downtown Bumfk. However, in Manhattan in the upper 40s on the west side, they are less rare. And to Andrew Coxon, President of the De Beers Institute of Diamonds these items are not quite so rare. But rarity is a quantifiable term. And the truth is that diamonds are plentiful, except for special cases. |
#2
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Diamonds
Posted By: Brad Green
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#3
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Diamonds
Posted By: peter ullman
that grading system is similar to the one hager tried to employ in his bloated price book years ago...presumably since he's a coin man. I'd venture there are 63 wagners out there. |
#4
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Diamonds
Posted By: Frank Wakefield
I'd guesstimate the T206 Wagner to be an R4. |
#5
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Diamonds
Posted By: Steve M.
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#6
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Diamonds
Posted By: barrysloate
Hi Gil- welcome back. |
#7
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Diamonds
Posted By: Jason L
even before trying to learn how many of a certain card has survived through to today, do we have information about how many of each set was produced in the first place? (For example, how many T200s were produced?) |
#8
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Diamonds
Posted By: barrysloate
No, and that's a good point. The Mint documents how many coins are made each year, but no such information exists regarding baseball cards. I think it has been estimated around one million T206 have survived, but nobody knows for sure, and certainly nobody knows how many were printed. |
#9
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Diamonds
Posted By: Jason L
there are probably a series of questions that could be strung together in an effort to estimate production numbers for various vintage card sets... |
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Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Diamonds in the Rough | Archive | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 2 | 01-24-2006 07:23 PM |