Why Do You Think We Care About Your Submission Results?
CalGold
Posts: 2,608 ✭✭
Forgive me if this post offends you, but I am finding it very tiresome wading through threads that list a host of coins with the expected and actual submission results, often peppered with gripes about the outcome. What are you telling us by those posts? That you are a great grader or a lousy grader. And why do you think we care?
Now if you have a particular coin that you think might be incorrectly graded and you want to post a picture with a request for opinions to see if others concur that it might warrant a re-grade, that makes some sense.
And guess the grade can be fun and educational for some I suppose, though grading from a photo is really just guess work.
But if you are constantly getting disappointing low grades on your submissions you should come to realize that you are not good at grading. So use your experience as a learning tool instead of crying about it.
On the other hand, if you are constantly getting great results, then instead of gloating, how about creating helpful posts with grading tips like Marc Feld is doing.
I guess I'm not going to make many friends with this post huh?
CG
Now if you have a particular coin that you think might be incorrectly graded and you want to post a picture with a request for opinions to see if others concur that it might warrant a re-grade, that makes some sense.
And guess the grade can be fun and educational for some I suppose, though grading from a photo is really just guess work.
But if you are constantly getting disappointing low grades on your submissions you should come to realize that you are not good at grading. So use your experience as a learning tool instead of crying about it.
On the other hand, if you are constantly getting great results, then instead of gloating, how about creating helpful posts with grading tips like Marc Feld is doing.
I guess I'm not going to make many friends with this post huh?
CG
0
Comments
1966-1971
Feel better now?
Russ, NCNE
Some just want to rewrite the grading rules to fit their own views as to what a certain grade should look like.
Its all educational to me.
BWAHAHAHAHAAHAA
Calgold I couldn't agree more BUT do you realize many including me buy tons of coins from photographs?!!
Yes, the submission results are tedious and maybe they could have their own Forum?
One other question that will get some you mad. How many times have you received your submission, found that PCGS overgraded a coin, and then you sent it back to them with an letter asking them to down grade because it does not deserve the lofty grade shown on the slab?
CG
<< <i>As I said, if you have a real issue about the grading of a particular coin, posting a picture and asking for opinions makes sense. But how is it educational to look at a list of grades without being able to see the coins in question?
One other question that will get some you mad. How many times have you received your submission, found that PCGS overgraded a coin, and then you sent it back to them with an letter asking them to down grade because it does not deserve the lofty grade shown on the slab?
CG >>
Logically nobody would do this...How many times have to read a "submissions results" thread? If you're not interested in them don't read them...I am new and I have avoided every thread that involves certain people because already I have learned it's just going to be people throwing bs at each other and is a waste of my time...so instead of making comments like this that you know is just going to upset people, as you stated, than why do it? I am not trying to throw bs here myself I'm just trying to figure out why anyone would do this...it's an internet forum not an invite only gold club people should be allowed to talk about what they want to with people that share common interests even if it isn't 'on topic'...alright enough banter
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
However, posting grading results with no images, instructive comments, questions or discussion (in other words, just listing grades and NOTHING else), doesn't do much for most forum members, as best I can tell. I'm not commenting on how often that occurs because, quite frankly, I don't know the answer to that.
I realize that not everyone has the luxury of a scanner or a good camera but there are ways to share, discuss and enjoy coins without those items. I also wonder, when people complain about or express their pleasure over grades, if they are good enough judges of the coins' merits, to know if they truly got screwed or if they were the recipients of grading gifts. I certainly know that I'm wrong plenty of the time and I'm pretty good at this stuff.
Just some food for thought......... and perhaps another poster to throw to the wolves.
I make it a point to send back every coin that does not deserve its lofty grade. Its called the PCGS guarantee and if you don't, it's not smart business. I do however wish the over/under equation was equal.
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
<< <i>I in fact go through the PCGS system and put in random submission numbers to see what others are getting >>
Clackamas,
Me too! Matter of fact, I punched in a number a little while ago looking for Accented Hairs and came up with a bunch of Lincolns!
Russ, NCNE
"The silver is mine and the gold is mine,' declares the LORD GOD Almighty."
I believe you may have misunderstood my comment regarding returning overgraded coins. Perhaps I was not clear enough in my post. The PGCS guarantee applies if you purchased an overgraded coin and want PCGS to refund the difference to you. I am talking about sending in one of your own raw or cross over coins and getting it back overgraded.
CG
And I like sharing my occassional results at times because I'm either pleasantly surprised, relieved, or just want to share. I've got two invoices waiting in the dungeon of PCGS since 12/12 and when it finally gets done (25 working days and counting) it'll be such a relief that I'll probably say something just because it's taken so bloody long!
Seems that most of my posts regarding grade results and newps are ignored here, but that's OK. The point isn't to have 100 replies saying how great it is, but the enjoyment in sharing. The day I find myself not wanting to share my enthusiasm is the day I will probably leave coin collecting again till some distant day in the future, if ever.
Neil
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
mo <><
** I would take a shack on the Rock over a castle in the sand !! **
Don't take life so seriously...nobody gets out alive.
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I was messing with you and knew exactly what you were getting at but I had to mess with you. If I have a coin that is overgraded I always consider that PCGS has its own UNIQUE grading standard. I am baffled sometimes on why they grade a coin high or low. I grade on the ANA 40/20/20/20 standard but PCGS does not always adhere to this. They put more into luster than surface preservation which I don't always agree with so who is to say unless you are a PCGS grader what is or is not over or under graded. There are occasional bluders that a dead person could tell was BS but with your own submissions? I just got back a coin I think was over graded on surface preservation but the did not give me the Full Step designation. I got the short end. Prehaps PCGS gave me a grade bump because the FS was close but no cigar and I got the consolation prize. BTW it was an MS65 DDO 1943 jefferson (Double Eye). Should have gone 64FS but is now MS65. What do I do?
Its simple just don't read those posts. I will continue to post mine and so will others.
If you had a good photo of the details of the Jeff, you could post it with a question "why is this not full steps" or something like that and see what some of the Jeff experts think. That would be usefull. Of course getting a good detailed photo is difficult unless you've got top notch camera equipment with a macro lens.
CG
The Ludlow Brilliant Collection (1938-64)
I think if the coin is way overgraded you should send it TeleTrade and have them auction it off.
I was thinking the same thing.
CG
often times what I see inspires me to put all my 65s+68s under the jeep & back over them, then I look at what is for sale in the metro & on line in slab of the same and give a HOOT. reckon if ya got it flaunt it, - gradining = - bad buying. if grading is such a Biggie then Respect it and enjoy the results Good or Bad !
Alan V. B.............. mile hi city
<< <i>I think if the coin is way overgraded you should send it TeleTrade and have them auction it off. >>
Ha ha.. I take it this happens alot? I have never boughten a coin from Teletrade.......
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
Say what do people think of Teletrades new feature on track and bid page - a flashing green light (you WON this lot)?
So what about that guarantee? If PCGS calls a coin MS67 and you think MS66, and send it back, shouldn't it be the same for everyone - or are the original submitters exempt from buy-out/replacement option? I guess if you were a doctor and it started to turn bad, you probably wouldn't want to.
I'm sick of some here only to sell their business.
That's what they made the back button for.
Camelot
I'll shut up.
People post their submission results because they're excited, and whether or not I can see a picture, or hold the slab, doesn't matter in the least. They want to share their excitement, and that's what got me into this hobby. Someone shared their excitement with me. When people stop doing that, this hobby will die. When I stop doing it, I won't give a rat's behind about any coins, mine or yours, slabbed or not, real or fake, stunning or trash. If you're in it purely for the science, or the financial opportunities, then you're not a collector, and you should start a board dedicated solely to the study of numismatic sciences and finance.
It seems to me that anyone who truly embraces this hobby has to have an almost unconscious understanding that the true root of it is excitement and appreciation. The coins are beautiful, and that's why they are valuable. They aren't beautiful because they're valuable.
I may not read everyone's submission reports, but I'd be sad if no one posted them here. It would signal to me that either "the fun" is gone from my hobby, or I'm in the wrong place. Maybe a little of both?
Don't you still get a little smile on your face when Ralphie gets the Red Ryder BB Gun? The gun is worth 15 bucks, tops. There's nothing special about it. Except to Ralphie. And even though we've seen it 500 times, we all still smile when he beams back at his dad, and loads it for the first time. Not because its the finest known Red Ryder Carbine Action, 200 Shot, Range Model Air Rifle. But because Ralphie genuinely loves it.
When it comes to coins...call me Ralphie. And when I can't be Ralphie anymore, or I can't appreciate when someone else is being Ralphie, then the magic is gone, and I will be too.
{soapbox /off}
"France said this week they need more evidence to convince them Saddam is a threat. Yeah, last time France asked for more evidence it came rollin thru Paris with a German Flag on it." -Dave Letterman
Profoundly well said.
Russ, NCNE
<< <i> have only three things to say................Lets move on. >>
Yes, and quickly, please.
My other love is astronomy.
Clyde Tombaugh was an amazing astronomer who spent his entire life studying the skies and promoting amateur astronomy. At the age of 23, he discovered the planet Pluto. He truly loved astronomy, not for the science, but for the wonder. He is credited with two quotes which are among my favorites, and which have relevance to this discussion as well (in my opinion).
Once asked by several of his students at the University of Arizona what exactly it was they were looking at in the telescope, and how it came to be, Tombaugh replied "I haven't the slightest idea. But isn't it absolutely grand?"
And possibly my all-time favorite quote from ANYONE: At age 87 (three years before his death), Tombaugh was asked by the Smithsonian for the telescope he used as a farm boy in 1928 to sketch Mars and Jupiter (it was these sketches which landed him the internship with Percival Lowell, where he discovered Pluto one year later) . Tombaugh had built the telescope as a young boy, from parts he found laying around the farm where he grew up. His reply to the Smithsonian?
"I'm still using it."
Clyde was Ralphie too.
I swear I'm done now
"France said this week they need more evidence to convince them Saddam is a threat. Yeah, last time France asked for more evidence it came rollin thru Paris with a German Flag on it." -Dave Letterman