Welcome to our community

Be apart of something great, join today!

Would this card be an 8.5 or a 9?

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

GAbballplayer148

New member
Joined
Aug 13, 2008
Messages
2,249
Reaction score
0
I posted this on the Grading boards, but it hasn't had a single view all day.

I received a card that has grades of 10, 8.5, 8.5, 8.5. If I re submitted this card and got a 10, 8.5, 9, 8.5 would that still be an overall 8.5 or a 9?
 

scotty21690

New member
Joined
Aug 7, 2008
Messages
16,150
Reaction score
0
8.5

A final grade can never be higher than the 2nd lowest subgrade, I'm pretty sure.
 

J.O.

New member
Joined
Aug 7, 2008
Messages
3,507
Reaction score
0
average of the 4 grades, never higher than 1 point more than lowest grade

(a 5 10 10 10 would be a 6)
 

EricInCT

New member
Joined
Jan 8, 2009
Messages
6,680
Reaction score
0
Think of it this way:

you receive a 10,10,10,8.5

the highest a graded card can receive is .5 better than the LOWEST grade. Thus this card would receive a 9.0.

Hope that helps
 

GAbballplayer148

New member
Joined
Aug 13, 2008
Messages
2,249
Reaction score
0
EricInCT said:
Think of it this way:

you receive a 10,10,10,8.5

the highest a graded card can receive is .5 better than the LOWEST grade. Thus this card would receive a 9.0.

Hope that helps

I just got this response in my thread in the grading forum by f2tornado:

"Still an 8.5. In general, the card will only grade as high as the second lowest subgrade. In your case you would still have two 8.5 subgrades and that would be the overall grade to expect.

Another tidbit worth noting... The final grade is not higher than a half point above the lowest subgrade. There are rare cases when a card has a 10,10,10,8.5 and still get an overall 9.5."
 

The_ReverendAct2

New member
Joined
Aug 7, 2008
Messages
3,556
Reaction score
0
That is not necessarily true. I sent a Jay Bruce TCU Auto Refractor last year and these were the subs:

Centering 9
Corners 10
Edges 9.5
Surface 8

the final grade was...............................9.

So that rule does not always hold true.
 

gregbara

New member
Joined
Aug 10, 2008
Messages
712
Reaction score
0
Blue Hodges Reverend said:
That is not necessarily true. I sent a Jay Bruce TCU Auto Refractor last year and these were the subs:

Centering 9
Corners 10
Edges 9.5
Surface 8

the final grade was...............................9.

So that rule does not always hold true.

Please post a scan, thats interesting, you got lucky.
 

leatherman

Active member
Joined
Aug 7, 2008
Messages
2,303
Reaction score
0
Location
The Atlanta suburbs
J.O. said:
average of the 4 grades, never higher than 1 point more than lowest grade

(a 5 10 10 10 would be a 6)

Dead wrong.

This is the BGS algorithm:

Take two lowest subgrades.
1. If two lowest subgrades are equal, overall grade is the same as those subgrades.
2. If two lowest subgrades differ by 0.5 , overall grade is the same as the 2nd highest subgrade.
3. If two lowest subgrades differ by 1.0 or more, it gets tricky:
A) If lowest subgrade is for Edges or Surface, AND the 2 highest subgrades are at least 1.5 higher than the lowest subgrade, then the overall grade will be 1.0 higher than the lowest subgrade.
B) All other instances result in the overall grade being 0.5 higher than the lowest subgrade.

Some examples (Centering, Corners, Edges, Surface):

8.5, 8.5, 9.5, 9 = BGS 8.5 (case 1)
9.5, 9, 9, 9.5 = BGS 9 (case 1)
8, 9.5, 9.5, 8.5 = BGS 8.5 (case 2)
9.5, 9.5, 9.5, 8 = BGS 9 (case 3A)
9, 9, 9, 7.5 = BGS 8.5 (case 3A)
9, 9, 9, 8 = BGS 8.5 (case 3B)

Three 9.5s and an 8.5 = always a 9
 

GAbballplayer148

New member
Joined
Aug 13, 2008
Messages
2,249
Reaction score
0
leatherman said:
J.O. said:
average of the 4 grades, never higher than 1 point more than lowest grade

(a 5 10 10 10 would be a 6)

Dead wrong.

This is the BGS algorithm:

Take two lowest subgrades.
1. If two lowest subgrades are equal, overall grade is the same as those subgrades.
2. If two lowest subgrades differ by 0.5 , overall grade is the same as the 2nd highest subgrade.
3. If two lowest subgrades differ by 1.0 or more, it gets tricky:
A) If lowest subgrade is for Edges or Surface, AND the 2 highest subgrades are at least 1.5 higher than the lowest subgrade, then the overall grade will be 1.0 higher than the lowest subgrade.
B) All other instances result in the overall grade being 0.5 higher than the lowest subgrade.

Some examples (Centering, Corners, Edges, Surface):

8.5, 8.5, 9.5, 9 = BGS 8.5 (case 1)
9.5, 9, 9, 9.5 = BGS 9 (case 1)
8, 9.5, 9.5, 8.5 = BGS 8.5 (case 2)
9.5, 9.5, 9.5, 8 = BGS 9 (case 3A)
9, 9, 9, 7.5 = BGS 8.5 (case 3A)
9, 9, 9, 8 = BGS 8.5 (case 3B)

Three 9.5s and an 8.5 = always a 9

David, thank you so much. Very helpful post.
 

Members online

Latest posts

Top