The PCGS grading Book
LAWMAN
Posts: 1,274 ✭✭
Does anybody out there know why the PCGS grading book is no longer in print? I have seen it advertised on various web sites, but I am curious about this. Is PCGS saying that they disavow the grading standards set forth in the book (I haven't read the book yet)? Somebody please enlighten me on this.
DSW
0
Comments
"Probably" offer it? Wouldn't PCGS definately offer it if they are working on a new edition?
Cameron Kiefer
Because the book is out of print?
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
If you become a bird watcher, you learn all you can about the various species in your area (and even some in remoter places)
If you become a PS2 addict, you buy the third party manuals and guides to "beat the game".
If you collect cars, you learn all you can about the shape of the body, what kind of parts go into it, how to fix it, etc.
If you collect coins....uh...duh..."send it in to be graded????" Such idiocy.
EVERY coin collector needs to know how to grade the coins they wish to collect. If you want the coin to be conserved, slabs are probably the best bet. But to rely upon a grading company alone is ludicrous. And if that grading service does not publicly publish its standards or removes from the public forum their standards of grading, you would have to ask questions. Most grading companies state that they follow A.N.A. standards. If that's true, then the best thing to do is grab yourself a copy of the Official A.N.A. Grading Standards of U.S. Coins. But if that is also true, then when you pick up a slab, then using the published standard should result in like grading.
As we all know, this is not always the case. So is it the grading company or the grader? Obviously it's the grader! Even if the company has set guidelines and a published standard, the grader (or panel of graders in some cases) is the "ultimate authority". However, *YOU* should be the ultimate authority. So when the company no longer publishes their standard, what do you do? Do you have your own set of standards for your coins? Are there certain expectations you have for certain grades? The onlu fallback you have is to go to the gading source that the company claims to use (which is almost always the A.N.A. standards). If you like PCGS grading so much, buy a bunch of coins denominations in various mint state grades and compare!
www.Numismatic-Playground.com
For someone who doesn't have the background, the time to learn the black art of grading MS coins, or the means to attend an ANA grading class, a slabbed coin can be the difference between enjoying the hobby or taking a financial bath.
Of course you are right that people should learn to grade regardless. It's important if you are spending money on coins. But for some people a slabbed coin is right.
(Plus, everyone knows you can't learn to grade MS coins out of a book, no matter what! )
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
Will it reveal all the secrets?
Will I be able to give up the day job and get a job as a PCGS grader after reading the book?
Will I win the World Series of Grading? Will I enter?
Only the Shadow knows . . . . .
You are doing well, subject 15837. You are a good person.
You are doing well, subject 15837. You are a good person.
Link to PCGS grading guide on BST board
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