“Details” Grade Question

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Randy Abercrombie, Apr 21, 2018.

  1. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Rich I know what you're saying, and yes I agree 100% that the TPGs are way, waaaaaaaay more lenient with things like scratches than they ever used to be. The 1904 that you attached above - that coin has absolutely no business being in a straight grade slab ! I think you're over estimating the size a good bit by saying it's 3/4 in., but it's definitely severe enough to warrant a details slab.

    The other 2 coins you posted links to, again the 1904 is questionable at best in my opinion due to that gouge near the bottom, but the Saint, that scratch, if it's a scratch, is not severe enough to warrant a details slab. And I'm a lot more strict than the TPGs are.

    But it is that very leniency that makes me question the coin Jim is talking about. I mean given the TPGs are so lenient nowadays, if they detailed a coin for scratch/s then what does that say about the coin ? It tells me the scratch/s are pretty bad. That's what I'm basing my comments on.

    Either way, there is no way for us to make a determination without at least seeing the coin.
     
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  3. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Rich I also want you, and others, to understand that the only reason I made the comments I did regarding grades is this. As long as a TPG tells a submitter what they want to hear - the submitter never questions the TPG. In fact they do quite the opposite - they simply accept the TPGs opinion as if it were carved in stone on a mountain someplace ! Even if and when others tell the submitter that the TPG screwed up, made a mistake - the submitter will almost always simply refuse to believe it !

    But let a TPG tell a submitter something they do not want to hear - and the submitter will be jumping up and down asking questions, claiming the TPG couldn't possibly be right ! And if and when others confirm the TPGs opinion, the submitter will still almost always simply refuse to believe it.

    The point of course is that people will only believe what they want to believe - regardless of what anyone else tells them.
     
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  4. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    I still find the "Graded while at the show" hard to believe. As I said that is a minimum of $125 and I don't know of any special discount for dealers at the shows.
     
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  5. imrich

    imrich Supporter! Supporter

    Doug, Thanks for your critique/assessment/correction. You're correct, that scratch is only 3/8 inch in length. I believe we're generally in agreement, but there should be a physical standard as to what constitutes a scratch, as I've seen some beautiful expensive coins trashed in value, when even experienced individuals can't locate the fault.

    Did you ever see the PCI coin believed argued by an "expert" in their lawsuit as being scratched, significantly increasing their liability. I'd love to see that coin!
     
  6. Maxfli

    Maxfli Well-Known Member

    Thank goodness that never happens here. :D
     
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  7. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    In a way there already is. Things like length, width, depth - they all vary depending on which coin is affected - the smaller the coin, the smaller the scratch has to be. The bigger the coin, the bigger the scratch. Then ya have to throw in location for consideration, is it in a prime focal area, a secondary, a tertiary, and even those vary from coin to coin. On some it's in the fields, others the devices. Even obverse and reverse make a difference.

    An experienced grader knows all of this, but few collectors do it seems. And it is my belief that it is their lack of knowledge that usually makes them question, or not question, what the TPGs do and don't do.

    And of course the opposite is also true. For when one does know all of that, it also makes one question what the TPGs do and don't do.

    But are there actual defined physical measurements ? No, there isn't. But that's largely because unless one has very sophisticated instruments, measuring width and depth is all but physically impossible. Sure length can physically measured fairly easily, the others not. And the same kind of thing applies to any physical damage done to a coin. And that's why determination is left to experience, not physical measurements.
     
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  8. mlov43

    mlov43 주화 수집가

    Heck, that's a nice coin...
     
  9. mlov43

    mlov43 주화 수집가

    Yes. I think AI in combination with human graders will be part of the solution eventually. Charles Morgan at CoinWeek has talked talked about this before.
     
  10. Jim Dale

    Jim Dale Well-Known Member

    I have tried every which way to get a quality picture that I can post. I do see some very small "scratches" and I just want to know which or what scratches NGC is talking about. They won't talk to me about it and they graded it, so why can't they talks about it? I live in a small town in North Carolina and trying to get face to face help is like pulling "Hen's teeth".
     
  11. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    I understand the difficulty. But go ahead and post what ya got, you'd be surprised at what is good enough in some cases.
     
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