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<p>[QUOTE="cpm9ball, post: 1245889, member: 24633"]Yes, there is an evaluation fee of 1% of the delcared value or $5 whichever is greater. It's not a good idea to fudge on the value because you would be cutting off your nose to spite your face. Suppose you had a coin that, if conserved, could grade MS67 and be worth $5K, but you didn't want to pay a $50 evaluation fee so you claimed a value of $1K ($10 evaluation fee). NCS conserved the coin and it was submitted to NGC where it indeed graded MS67. Now, suppose the coin got lost in the return mail. NGC would only be responsible to pay no more than your stated value.</p><p><br /></p><p>Angelo, it is unfortunate that situations like yours happen, but it certainly hasn't been the first time and won't be the last. What sometimes occurs is that conservation exposes an underlying problem that was previously hidden. You really shouldn't blame it on NGC. You should blame it on the person who doctored the coin in the first place to hide the problem. What you should have done is try to get compensation from the person who sold it to you.</p><p><br /></p><p>Chris[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="cpm9ball, post: 1245889, member: 24633"]Yes, there is an evaluation fee of 1% of the delcared value or $5 whichever is greater. It's not a good idea to fudge on the value because you would be cutting off your nose to spite your face. Suppose you had a coin that, if conserved, could grade MS67 and be worth $5K, but you didn't want to pay a $50 evaluation fee so you claimed a value of $1K ($10 evaluation fee). NCS conserved the coin and it was submitted to NGC where it indeed graded MS67. Now, suppose the coin got lost in the return mail. NGC would only be responsible to pay no more than your stated value. Angelo, it is unfortunate that situations like yours happen, but it certainly hasn't been the first time and won't be the last. What sometimes occurs is that conservation exposes an underlying problem that was previously hidden. You really shouldn't blame it on NGC. You should blame it on the person who doctored the coin in the first place to hide the problem. What you should have done is try to get compensation from the person who sold it to you. Chris[/QUOTE]
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Has anyone ever used NCS? What were your results?
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