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How many members can grade from pictures?

This has been a question posed frequently in the last ten years,sore subject with me.I say you cant!
Great coins are not cheap,and cheap coins are not great!
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Ron
Just not always accurately or correctly!
bob
Did I inspire you to start this thread?
.....but I think that we do better on average with Morgans when the pics are decent.
<< <i>I have to agree at the moment based upon most of the guesses from my recent thread.
Did I inspire you to start this thread?
.....but I think that we do better on average with Morgans when the pics are decent. >>
Yes you did,as i have had forum members who are supposed experts in a field,claim they can accurately not only grade,but price from pictures.Must be real good to do that too.
IMO, it is not a question of the grader, it is a question of the coin. Some can be, some can't.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
<< <i>I cannot grade though I like to think I can interpret photos by comparative analysis from a photograde book by QDB. >>
Best answer yet,Bob yours was cutest.
AB
Hoard the keys.
<< <i>I think I can interpret a lot of things in images and know what to expect in the coin. Also can see when pics are messed with to deceive. >>
Not the question Todd,we all have learned to decipher different images from different people.Yours ar different from Jeremys and his are different than Heritages or Teletrades and different ebay sellers,and many of us can interpret alot based on whose images,how long we have watched them etc.For instance,Laura De Falco scans were certainly brighter,and different,but those who bought coins from Mikey may he rest in peace knew that.Gary Mugno had great pics before he passed away,but took him years to get there.When i first bought coins from him they were always nicer in hand as his first images were understated etc.Just saying when some members make calls on coins they have never seen in hand from someone elses opinion,it has cost me alot of money.Luster,pop,color,PLish or DMPL surfaces just cant be GRADED from images.JMHO
Get an idea of the grade? A lot of times.
Lighting/angle/style all can expose minor flaws and make them seem huge while at the same time can hide things.
The thing is also that most of the pictures exaggerate the coins, due to the actual size being so much smaller, so one needs to be careful grading from pics that are 3-100x larger than real life on the coin.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
I can tell you what grade the picture is. As for the coin? good luck. --Jerry
Apart from that I think Lehigh96's answer is the best.
"How many members can grade from pictures?"
-----
I can. Of course nobody else may agree with me, and I
may not even agree with myself if I see the coin in hand,
or even a different picture.
We just do it for fun here anyway.
~
"America suffers today from too much pluribus and not enough unum.".....Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay
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coinJP, Outhaul ,illini420,MICHAELDIXON, Fade to Black,epcjimi1,19Lyds,SNMAN,JerseyJoe, bigjpst, DMWJR , lordmarcovan, Weiss,Mfriday4962,UtahCoin,Downtown1974,pitboss,RichieURich,Bullsitter,JDsCoins,toyz4geo,jshaulis, mustanggt, SNMAN, MWallace, ms71, lordmarcovan
Mike
<< <i>No one can grade from a photo. You can get an idea of grade, and that is why so many call it "guess the grade." >>
Agree---If the pic is high quality, you can come fairly close, especially in the circulated grades. In MS grades, it's more difficult since luster is harder to discern in pics and hairlines aren't always visible in pics.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
I find the saints even easier since it usually comes down to just counting marks. But given a good photo, luster blast
can be evaluated as well. Hairlines on silver coins can easily be hidden. Most AU coins can easily be weeded
out from among mint state coins. Yeah, there's that rare AU58+ with 95% luster than can fool a lot of people. But even
if it does, it's market price is often in the MS61-63 range anyways. More often than not, it's the grader's inexperience in not being
able to tell an AU58 from a mint state coin, not the camera's.
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
<< <i>This has been a question posed frequently in the last ten years,sore subject with me. I say you cant! >>
Absolutely no way.
In fact, didn't PCGS recently have a contest to see how well collectors could guess the grade IN HAND, and the best performance (the winner) was only 40% correct?
Trying to match opinions with a TPG grader's in-hand inspection vs an online image is just impossible to do with any consistency. Ballpark grade? Sure. Precise grade? Heck no.
<< <i>I have a submission for PCGS... it would be cool if i could just send photos and my cc number. Then they email me back with the grades and I could write the results on the 2x2s
Proof coins......No
Uncirculated......Maybe. (If I can guess within one grade of the actual grade, I consider that pretty good)
be an incentive for you to buy it? Or just pass? Auction houses and dealer websites have the
opportunity to really give us the true(almost) quality of a coin.
A couple of examples:
1. An early dollar is offered for sale as a MS 62. But the reverse shield and stars are almost flat, though the luster and obverse strike is nice.
In addition, there are adjustment marks on the reverse along 30% of the rims. Most of us can decide on this alone if the
coin is worth pursuing.
2. A CBH has excellent toning and surfaces, and might be a MS 63+ to 65, depending on the in hand view. It is also a scarce variety.
Of course, I am interested and will get the coin to view.
3. The proof seated liberty quarter looks DCAM, and there is nice rim toning. Could be a 65 to 67. For the specialist,
send it on.
No one should pay for( or bid on) an expensive coin, based on a photo. But knowing a few qualities will assist you in your buying habits.
<< <i>Grading from a pic at best is just counting dings and wear... So much is left out of a pic especially with proof and ms coins... Many times as well the way the lighting reflects off of imperfections in an image is way more exaggerated then the coin in hand...With that said with the images that are capable today does give a good shot at an educated guess... As far as pricing from a pic, better be really good at guessing... My 2 cents...
AB
AB,You hit my real point on the money,and folks shouldnt SWAG when it comes to monster coins.You as well as I as well as many board members who are willing to step up,get to play with the nicer coins.GETTING LUCKY DOESNT HURT EITHER.JMHO
of course not! who can grade perfectly or agree all the time? A "grade" is really an appriasal opinion
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
Uncirculated only becomes a problem because things can be hidden with shrewd lighting, and luster can be tough to determine. If one has multiple pics from various angles I think it can be done with reasonable accuracy.
<< <i>In the contests I've participated, I'm about plus or minus a half point on average. >>
Mike,Are these grading in hand or from pics?
<< <i>
<< <i>In the contests I've participated, I'm about plus or minus a half point on average. >>
Mike,Are these grading in hand or from pics? >>
From pictures.
Here's one such contest.
Link to CoinTalk contest
Scroll down to the results....I'm Leadfoot. After 300 odd coins, I'm averaging about 0.5 -- I had it down to the 0.3 range for a while before slipping recently.
My results on other GTGs are about the same -- I get about half of them right, and the rest I'm off by a point (e.g.. I guess 45 and the coin ends up being a 40), generally.
Frankly, I never thought I was that good at grading until I started to participate in these threads and keeping track. Going into it, my expectations were much lower -- like you I didn't think it was possible to be that accurate -- and the results kind of surprised me.
That said, I tend to stick to guessing coins/series I have some familiarity with -- if you posted a bunch of your toned Morgans or Jay's Saints I'm sure I'd do terrible. lol
WS
<< <i>I'm usually withing 10 points
Not bad, considering how coins are now graded on a 700 point scale.