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Replies: 17 / Views: 2,118 |
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Valued Member
United States
82 Posts |
I wouldn't think a dealer would ever give you some sort of guarantee on his grading capability unless you are paying him for his opinion.
But I think generally a dealer can tell pretty quickly if a coin is mint-state or not, regardless of series. My dealer will say "at least BU" rather than say it is MS-61 or MS-63 or whatever.
Similarly, if he says it's Gem or MS-65, I know that it is probably at least a 65 and might be a 66.
Learning to grade yourself is obviously the best advice. Whenever I get a dealer's advice on grade, I take it home and scrutinize the grade again myself. That will help you fine tune your skills.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1130 Posts |
Most dealers will "slide" a grade. For example, they will buy a coin from you for F but will try to sell the same coin as a VF.
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Valued Member
 United States
85 Posts |
Good advice, and so appreciated. Thank you.
Learning to grade yourself is obviously the best advice. Whenever I get a dealer's advice on grade, I take it home and scrutinize the grade again myself. That will help you fine tune your skills.
That really sounds like fun. I'm looking forward to that time. In the meantime, I have to figure out what DH has. He has kept it in bulk containers all mushed together. I'm still sorting out by denomination. Once I get it all into the database (if?) I'll feel like I can stop and breathe long enough to learn that skill. Until then, I'm still playing around and enjoying like crazy.
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Moderator
 United States
23522 Posts |
quote: Until then, I'm still playing around and enjoying like crazy.
Well, you got that part right. This is supposed to be fun. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
668 Posts |
Superdave, Is one of those three trusted online dealers Harlan J Berk? Ive been looking at some coins on his site.
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Moderator
 United States
23522 Posts |
Zach, I would deal with Harlan Berk without hesitation. I have, in fact, and I visit their site weekly for newps. But no, they're not on my short list. That list is composed of specific individuals - James Garcia, Mark Feld, a couple others, and not companies where I do not specifically know who is grading the coin.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
12437 Posts |
SuperDave, I also vouch for James Garcia, he is an excellent dealer and he is from the St. Louis area as well so I see him at the shows. As an aside, he recently wrote the auction catalog descriptions for the winter show in St. Louis https://www.scotsmanauctionco.com/a...x?Auction=54
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1130 Posts |
Yeah, I can vouch for James "Early US" Garcia too. He has helped me in looking over some coins to buy. Another one is Gene Henry from locally here in Washington State. He knows his stuff (a contributor to The Red Book) and prices are fair. He also helped me out authenticating some fake coins on ebay, including the 1909-S IHC last week.
Edited by 1sikevo 02/18/2008 9:03 pm
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Valued Member
United States
288 Posts |
I have always trusted Don Bonser. He knows. Good honest man. Need more like him. There are others.
Generally I would answer by asking you if you are buying or selling!
True story. I remember one dealer back in Indiana. I asked him what the difference was between M.S.60 and M.S.65. while flipping thru a price guide that he had. He told me that the M.S.60 was what he bought them for and that the M.S.65 was what he sold them for. I was playing stupid to determine his honesty. I got his honest answer. Again, There are others.
Buy a coin from your local dealer and ask him about his grading methods. Keep the coin for 6 months. Return to the store with the exact coin in a new holder and ask him to grade the coin and make an offer. You will learn a lot very quickly.... gusp
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Valued Member
United States
143 Posts |
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Forum Mom
 United States
5877 Posts |
As a general rule, I would request large, clear pics of any coin you are looking to purchase from the internet. Even with well-respected dealers, there is a difference in areas of expertise. Once you have the pics, you can feel free to post them here in the grading section. It certainly is not a foolproof method, but this will definitely give you an honest idea of the grade of a coin and help to hone your own grading skills. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1541 Posts |
Has anyone worked with Dick Osburn?
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Valued Member
United States
111 Posts |
You really shouldn't buy raw coins from your friendly dealer in town or mail order if you can't grade. Because if you can't grade, you don't know if he's reputable.
I have one on line dealer I use. I trust them completely. The very few times I've disagreed with a grade. I pulled out the grading guide and found that they were spot on. They also take returns for 30 days, and will buy-back the coin at 80% of the current retail for life. Firms like this are rare. I had to go through a number of bad mail order places until I found them. But I consider it time well spent.
As far as my local guys go. They generally grade accurately when selling. They have to. I don't buy coins (any more) until I know how to grade them. On the other hand, my local guys ALWAYS-ALWAYS-ALWAYS claim a coin I'm selling is a couple of grades less than actual.
I understand about business in general, costs, and margins. I just wish wish they'd tell me their offer instead of insulting my intelligence. That's the nature of the beast. I ignore what they say about grades when I'm selling, and just listen to the offered price.
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Valued Member
United States
66 Posts |
I only buy coins that are professionally graded. I have learned the hard way over the years. I have gotten counterfeits ( bought a 1875 Trade dollar sent it to pcgs and it was silver but it was a mexican peso filed down and re-stamped. I called the seller who gave me my money back and paid me for my grading cost. Nice guy but he also had no idea what he we selling I was an idioy:( and lucky to get my money back), mis graded stuff etc. But now that I learned to grade and I have taken some classes offered by the ANA and have poured over information I know what to look for. I always tended to under grade common coins and over grade rarer coins...imagine that:) Information is the key, learn as much has possible on your area your focusing on. The ANA also offers a lending library on almost anything you would want. happy hunting
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Valued Member
 United States
85 Posts |
I have the same fear that you do, altho thankfully not because I have been taken. At least as far as I know, I have not. Being such a neophyte opens me up to all kinds of things, so I absolutely need to be careful with whom I do business. Very cautious so far, but having fun along the learning pathway.
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