Lancemountain
Active member
wow great sale.
GC do you know speared that one?
GC do you know speared that one?
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wow great sale.
GC do you know speared that one?
Crazy sale IMO, I've stated that the back centering would irritate the hell out of me. From my unscientific measuring its at 65/35.
Congrats to the seller and the buyer. I doubt PW saw the card bring $20k so I'm sure they are very happy.
Ryan
Counting pixels on the back edges of the card, I came up with 11/18 on the top, and 10/19 on the bottom. That comes out to 38/62 and 34/66 centering, well within PSA's 75/25 minimum standard for back centering on a PSA 10.
I have no problem with the fuzzy edges; that's how the card was created. Condition sensitive sets have cards that are created perfectly, and are then quickly damaged: from the sheet cutter to the pack, from the pack to the penny sleeve, and so on. 1970s Topps sets, however, with quickly blunted wire cutters, were given fuzzy edges as a byproduct of their cardboard birth.
The more analogous argument is to look at a mint card that is off-centered. It is as perfect as it was when created, so why dock it grade points? Some cards have really only been found off-centered; should 10s be handed out for them?
The most compelling argument for giving 10s to fuzzy-edged cards (ridiculousness terminology noted) is the sheer pervasiveness of them; for years, nearly every card was produced that way. Should it really be impossible for a decade's worth of cards to get a 10?
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@Lancemountain , not sure what your post means , you seem to feel like we must agree to think that it is the perfect example?
Not trying to make you agree with me at all.
Just pointing out that you and mansgame and vnutt et all seem to have difficulty understanding the grade.
Grading of all eras should have a consistant scale all across the board.
1000% disagree
I think most here now understand the grade, but are of the non expert opinion that PSA's grading scale is flawed.To give one era of cards more leniancy over another just because "they were commonly made that way" seems inconsistant to say the least.If the card has a rough edge or is badly off centered, regardless if it was made in '75 or '07, it's still a flaw.Grading of all eras should have a consistant scale all across the board.
This card, and most like it, left the printers with the edges it still exhibits.