My thoughts on grading and resubmissions...
rbeaton
Posts: 631 ✭
Here are my thoughts on resubmissions getting different grades. Let's suppose you have a card which should be graded an 8. Now, assume that PSA has 20 graders and they each grade the card as follows: Grader #1 - #4 give the card a 7, #5 - #17 give the card an 8, and #18 - #20 give the card a 9. This is a relatively normal distribution since grading is subjective, and I doubt you could ever find 20 different people to give a given card the same grade. If you average all 20 grades, you would get an 8 (actually 7.95 for you math majors). Now, lets assume that only 3 graders look at the card (which I really doubt happens with $5 gradings of 70's commons for example). If graders #1, #2 and #3 look at your card, then you are going to get a 7. If graders #18, #19 and #20 look at the card, then it will get a 9. If you randomly choose 3 graders, then chances are that the card will get an 8 since the majority of the graders gave the card an 8.
Now, if you hand pick out a high end 8 and resubmit. The 20 graders could give the following: #1 gives a 7 (this is the Grader of Death), #2 - #10 give it an 8, #11 - #19 give it a 9 and #20 gives it a 10 (this guy is in a really good mood today). Depending on the number of graders who actually look at the card and which graders are used, this card could get anywhere from a 7 to a 10. It also has an equal shot at getting an 8 or a 9. So, it's not really suprising to me that a card can get a different grade if resubmitted.
Robert
Now, if you hand pick out a high end 8 and resubmit. The 20 graders could give the following: #1 gives a 7 (this is the Grader of Death), #2 - #10 give it an 8, #11 - #19 give it a 9 and #20 gives it a 10 (this guy is in a really good mood today). Depending on the number of graders who actually look at the card and which graders are used, this card could get anywhere from a 7 to a 10. It also has an equal shot at getting an 8 or a 9. So, it's not really suprising to me that a card can get a different grade if resubmitted.
Robert
Looking for:
Any high grade OPC Jim Palmer
High grade Redskins (pre 1980)
Any high grade OPC Jim Palmer
High grade Redskins (pre 1980)
0
Comments
If your hypothetical could actually happen, we do have a problem. I would like to see the card that goes from a 7 to a 10 on the same submission. The review process alone would get somebody fired.
<< <i>(this is the Grader of Death) >>
Why do many of my card submissions always seem to gravitate towards that fella ?
Man I hope to hell we don't ever have 7's getting 10's at a later point.
I think your thoughts have some validity... but your ranges are too high .... The difference between a 10 and a 7 are just to great for this to happen... Icould see your theory for a card grading a 7 being resubmitted being an 8 and if you have the luck of a lottery winner maybe just maybe a 9..... Jeff
Robert
Any high grade OPC Jim Palmer
High grade Redskins (pre 1980)
The problem is there arent 20 graders. There's like 3. With 1 being the "head" grader, or in my opinion the blind grader. The problem is the consistency has fallen off since Mike Baker has left. Plain and simple. I lost money on the 13 cards I cracked out of 9's because I had to prove to myself that I wasnt wrong. I wasnt, out of 13-9's, 11 came back lower. 11 do you believe that? If it would of been 3 or 4 I would of said I was mistaken, BUT 11 !!!! I'm not nuts, neither is any of the people who take the time to search, and submit. I believe, these collectors and there opinions before the "graders", WE have the better eye than they do.
<< <i>out of 13-9's, 11 came back lower. 11 do you believe that? >>
This goes with my theory. The first time through, they were graded by the generous graders, while the second time through, they were graded by the tougher graders. Perhaps in both cases, they were only graded by 1 or 2 different people (Again, I doubt that 3 graders look at each card). And yes, I agree that this is a problem. I was just pointing out how it could happen.
As to your cards (which I believe you sent back in the holders the first time, and were told the grades were right) my thinking is that they don't want to admit the grades are wrong. When you crack them out and re-submit, then they don't know what was assigned the first time.
As the number of graders increase, the odds get better that the card gets graded accurately.
Robert
Any high grade OPC Jim Palmer
High grade Redskins (pre 1980)
Bob,
Is there really only 3 or 4 graders? If that's the case, I see why they've backed off on-site grading at most shows. Also, how can only a few graders get so many cards graded in the turnaround times we've been seeing? I know I'm not an expert grader in any sense of the word, but even after the original weeding out process of the bad cards, it takes me forever to accurately assess even a small group of quality cards for submission. Just wondering.
Bernie
Currently collecting.....your guess is as good as mine.
<< <i>Is there really only 3 or 4 graders? If that's the case, I see why they've backed off on-site grading at most shows. Also, how can only a few graders get so many cards graded in the turnaround times we've been seeing? I know I'm not an expert grader in any sense of the word, but even after the original weeding out process of the bad cards, it takes me forever to accurately assess even a small group of quality cards for submission. Just wondering. >>
There are many of us wondering the same thing. "Doc" once said in one of his posts that each card is looked at for no more than 1 minute during the grading process. That may explain the fast turnaround times and the "different" grades by "different" graders at "different" times. I think I may crack some of my own out just to test the water.
More graders only help if they are skilled. If they are unskilled (in a particular issue, for instance), then they just increase the width of the hypothetical distribution and make the problem worse.
Scott
That's all for now...SSDD...
Joe
Thanks for the math...something sounded screwy. So what's thye magic number & does it really matter?
downgoesfrazier, I do not have the 77 Palmer 10, however, I do have a very nice 9 that I am happy with.
Robert
Any high grade OPC Jim Palmer
High grade Redskins (pre 1980)
Used to working on HOF SS Baseballs--Now just '67 Sox Stickers and anything Boston related.
Let me make a few things clear.
1) The graders that we have today are the same graders who have graded well over 90% of the cards in the past 4-5 years.
2) Mike Baker graded a very small percentage of cards here in the last couple of years (before he left). He became, primarily, a supervisor of the graders - more management-oriented than anything else.
3) Currently, we have over a dozen graders in-house - that's the only way we could grade 100,000 cards per month.
4) While we are susceptible to making a mistake (we are human beings here at PSA), we would not be in the position that we are in today if our consistency was an overall problem. If anyone ever has a problem with a grade, they are encouraged to contact me at ext. 170. I have always been available to collectors and dealers if a legitimate concern arises. Your business is highly valued by our staff, however, we would appreciate it if you would stick to the facts if you voice a concern on the boards. Please call me if you would like to talk.
Sincerely,
Joe Orlando
PSA President
CEO, Collectors Universe, Inc.
Website: http://www.qualitycards.com
boils down to 48 cards per hour per grader - or - 1.25 minutes per card -- very close to the 1 minute that was attributed to "doc"
My head hurts just thinking about it -- 48 cards every hour for 8 straight hours...ugggh!