Options
If 75% of the board responded that they can grade coins then what is your opinion of this?

If 75% of the board responded that they can grade coins then what is your opinion of this?
I posted a coin to be graded by the board, I take no insults at all but wanted to compare my grade to other. Forget about the coin itself but look at the opinions offered.
The grades range from a low VF to a high of MS63. That is a large gap.
Opinions? Comments?
I posted a coin to be graded by the board, I take no insults at all but wanted to compare my grade to other. Forget about the coin itself but look at the opinions offered.
The grades range from a low VF to a high of MS63. That is a large gap.
Opinions? Comments?
I seldom check PM's but do check emails often jason@seated.org
Buying top quality Seated Dimes in Gem BU and Proof.
Buying great coins - monster eye appeal only.
Buying top quality Seated Dimes in Gem BU and Proof.
Buying great coins - monster eye appeal only.
0
Comments
-Paul
I don't even need to grade, let them judge for themselves.
<< <i>Grading solely based on pictures is a COMPLETELY different ballgame than grading a coin in hand, with a good light source. >>
Ok - that is a excellent reason but with in what margin of error? There is some gap bettween a 20 to a 63. I easily see your point from say a 55 to a 63.
Buying top quality Seated Dimes in Gem BU and Proof.
Buying great coins - monster eye appeal only.
If you're refering to this thread: Linky
It's easy to see why there's a huge difference of opinion. I'd have graded that coin XF but could see it going VF or AU also.
The coin in question looked dipped and maybe whizzed and could lead some to say MS. That is tough with the pics provided.
Will’sProoflikes
<< <i>
<< <i>Grading solely based on pictures is a COMPLETELY different ballgame than grading a coin in hand, with a good light source. >>
Ok - that is a excellent reason but with in what margin of error? There is some gap bettween a 20 to a 63. I easily see your point from say a 55 to a 63. >>
That IS one helluva gap. But throw out the lowest 3 guesses, and the highest 3 guesses and I suspect that gap closes considerably. Remember, according to your own numbers, 25% of us cannot grade coins effectively.
Personal reporting surveys have very limited value. In the case of “ability to grade coins” individual opinion is not independently associated with a standard reference. The error bar would have to be objectively assessed for each person, then the universe of respondents correlated.
In the sample referred to, the margin or error is actually equal to the range of responses. Thus :… The grades range from a low VF to a high of MS63. That is a large gap. This is the normal and expected error for your sample, which means that any grade within that range is accurate.
We now return you to your regularly scheduled list of ebay gripes.
<< <i> …If 75% of the board responded that they can grade coins then what is your opinion of this?
Personal reporting surveys have very limited value. In the case of “ability to grade coins” individual opinion is not independently associated with a standard reference. The error bar would have to be objectively assessed for each person, then the universe of respondents correlated.
In the sample referred to, the margin or error is actually equal to the range of responses. Thus :… The grades range from a low VF to a high of MS63. That is a large gap. This is the normal and expected error for your sample, which means that any grade within that range is accurate.
We now return you to your regularly scheduled list of ebay gripes. >>
Translation: 75% of the respondents to the survey are overly optimistic about their grading abilities.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>Grading solely based on pictures is a COMPLETELY different ballgame than grading a coin in hand, with a good light source. >>
Ok - that is a excellent reason but with in what margin of error? There is some gap bettween a 20 to a 63. I easily see your point from say a 55 to a 63. >>
That IS one helluva gap. But throw out the lowest 3 guesses, and the highest 3 guesses and I suspect that gap closes considerably. Remember, according to your own numbers, 25% of us cannot grade coins effectively.
Excellent point about the 3 highest and 3 lowest .. this would make the concenses in the high AU low MS range... now in the original ebay auction before it was changed I believe the coin was listed as GEM bu ( which is usually understood to be 64/65 or better ) now who's going to send this baby off to PCGS to see how this plays out?
I wonder what results would be if the survey were limited to those who had taken the ANA grading class?
Despite this, as I count it, 16 out of 19 respondents put the coin in the AU to MS range. That's not too bad based on the coin in question.
-Randy Newman
I "think" I can grade, so do most, maybe we overestimate our ability?
Buying top quality Seated Dimes in Gem BU and Proof.
Buying great coins - monster eye appeal only.
<< <i>If 75% of the board responded that they can grade coins then what is your opinion of this? >>
They can grade to which standard? PCGS, NGC, or other? 1990 or 2008 standards? Are the TPG's grading accurately if their standards are different and change over time?
I think many specialists can grade well within their own series, in the grades they commonly collect, and these grades may differ from the TPG's opinions.
<< <i>very interesting,
I "think" I can grade, so do most, maybe we overestimate our ability? >>
Much in the same way that I'd guess most of us overvalue our personal collections.
<< <i>If you're refering to this thread: Linky
It's easy to see why there's a huge difference of opinion. I'd have graded that coin XF but could see it going VF or AU also.
The coin in question looked dipped and maybe whizzed and could lead some to say MS. That is tough with the pics provided. >>
In addition, I would add that that particular coin presents an additional grading challenge in terms of strike, particularly on the reverse where there only VF details present coupled with what looks like full mint luster. Definitely one for the Walker specialists in the house.
>>>My Collection
<< <i>My opinion is that collectors don't have enough opportunity to "calibrate" their personal grading knowledge. That is much of the value of the ANA course – and it’s something that should be taken several times over a period of years. Most collectors who claim to be able to grade coins have learned by the “seat of the pants” method…maybe they should try piloting a 767 the same way? >>
Sorta like teaching- you learn a bunch of abstract theory put forth by academic coneheads, then they throw you in a room with 32 overstimulated 7th graders! Go get 'em, Tiger!
-Randy Newman
I know that's what I did.
I do think most can grade the coins they collect. However, put them in front of an unfamiliar series and all bets are off. Some newbies think they can transfer their limited knowledge from one series to another, or into a completely different area (eg gold coins, Walker halves, early copper are all specialities with a lot of subtlety). When those newbies (those with less than five years) leverage their little bit of knowledge and mix it with their sometimes supersized egos, it leads to some really bad guesses.
While looking at images is not a substitute for looking at coins in person, if someone mostly buys from images, they best learn to evaluate images well. For companies with a standardized process for imaging, it is easier. On Ebay, when one seller may do excellent photos, another does crap photos, a third does enhanced photos, a fourth uses a scanner, it is harder.
The other 75% are made up of the range of serious numismatist (eg cladking/slumlord/Nysoto/Bill Jones/Fred Weinberg/Coppercoins...to only name a few), serious collectors who are learning to be numismatists (Russ and Keets come to mind), casual collectors (many of the people who are named when the monthly "Who is the Smartest member that posts here?" thread is started), and the weekend warrior collector...probably where we all started at one time.
Add the fact that you CAN NOT grade a coin from a pic and you get your range.
But yeah, 20 to 63 is a huge gap. Sometimes a coin can be MS or close to MS but might appear lower to others in an image because the luster doesn't show through (luster is often hard to capture in an image and still pictures don't cartwheel) and the coin is weakly struck. In such cases I can easily see someone calling a weakly struck MS-62 something like XF-40.
<< <i>If 75% of the board responded that they can grade coins then what is your opinion of this?
I posted a coin to be graded by the board, I take no insults at all but wanted to compare my grade to other. Forget about the coin itself but look at the opinions offered.
The grades range from a low VF to a high of MS63. That is a large gap.
Opinions? Comments? >>
Grading by definition is an opinion. Therefore, the logical conclusion of your survey is that only 75% of the board members are capable of formulating an opinion?
We ought to do another survey to determine the primary cause of the impairment of the other 25%.
<< <i>JRocco, that is still just an opinion. Grading people is a lot like grading coins. The majority don't self -grade with the same opinion that they grade others. >>
Are you saying 'ownership adds a point'?
<< <i>JRocco, that is still just an opinion. Grading people is a lot like grading coins. The majority don't self -grade with the same opinion that they grade others. Respectfully, John Curlis >>
You are correct sir.
Just as every parent thinks their monsters are angels
I think 100% of the this forum can grade coins. Anyone can grade
a coin. And since standards do not exist in this hobby everyone
can be right 100% of the time too.
<< <i>Grading solely based on pictures is a COMPLETELY different ballgame than grading a coin in hand, with a good light source. >>
'Zackly.
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
<< <i> If 75% of the board responded that they can grade coins then what is your opinion of this? >>
I think that 75% of the board members did not respond to your poll so all of the premises are not valid.
I for one commented but did not put in a response to the poll, and I don't think 75% of the members were even online yesterday when you ran it.
<< <i>The grades range from a low VF to a high of MS63. That is a large gap.
Opinions? Comments? >>
Opinion.....Some of the answers, grade opinions, are insane.
Comment..Some of the responders have not learned even the basics about grading or they were just screwing with you. Its one or the other.
Ken
to each his own
Menomonee Falls Wisconsin USA
http://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistr...dset.aspx?s=68269&ac=1">Musky 1861 Mint Set
<< <i>
<< <i>JRocco, that is still just an opinion. Grading people is a lot like grading coins. The majority don't self -grade with the same opinion that they grade others. Respectfully, John Curlis >>
You are correct sir.
Just as every parent thinks their monsters are angels
that's funny, I think my angels are monsters
Buying top quality Seated Dimes in Gem BU and Proof.
Buying great coins - monster eye appeal only.
<< <i>grading coins is like grading women
to each his own
that is more like toning vs bright white but I KNOW I can grade women ( landing them is a whole other story)
Buying top quality Seated Dimes in Gem BU and Proof.
Buying great coins - monster eye appeal only.
I do not say that out of deceit.
But I am the first to admit that grading of these coins is actually GRADING PICTURES OF COINS, not the coins themselves.
be sooooooo waaaaay off at other times. I do NOT KNOW HOW TO GRADE. Heck, I went to school for
2.5 years to learn to sell hearing aids. Now, I've not been to grading school, or even a class on grading,
so how good could I be good at it?
I would think that a grader has to look at thousands of coins weekly over a period of several months
to a year or more to get competent in determining a grade accurately. It has got to be a hands on
OJT type of learning to gain the expertise to do it properly.
Some on these boards could probably do just that. And some could probably grade their specialty
series (that they collect and know very well) with great competence. But there's not 2% of those
that responded that can really grade any coin properly.
bob