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- Aug 29, 2003
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Date: 4/11/2006 7:29:10 AM
Author: Garry H (Cut Nut)
I think there is no substitute for a vendors scan results Ana - GIA's data is, as you have shown - too broad to be useful with HCA when hair splitting near a HCA boundary.
Date: 4/10/2006 7:57:42 PM
Author: GeoAtl
aljdeway, please note:
1) the wholesaler has stated that both stones are eye-clean. Under the circumstances, I don''t see any difference between being forced to rely on the wholesaler or the retailer; and
2) the stone I am considering is also a 2006 AGS 0 stone with light performance rankings.
In light of the above, what additional information do you think is essential before the final decision is made?
Hi,Date: 4/10/2006 8:13:39 PM
Author: GeoAtl
David, it seems like you and I are/were interested in essentially the same stones, so I actually used your stone''s stats and the price from the previous thread as a guide for myself. The GIA stone that I am looking at here would probably end up being priced within +/- $50 of your price.
What I am still trying to figure out here is whether an AGS 0 certification or a ''better'' HCA score is a better predictor of the stone''s performance. Along the same lines, the AGS 0 stone that I am considering is a few hundred dollars more expensive than a GIA stone with a higher HCA score -- why is that?
Too funny Garry. What are the odds of finding a diamond on the market that falls exactly between the measurements on each facet set?Date: 4/11/2006 6:09:29 AM
Author: Garry H (Cut Nut)
GEO you are very safe with the GIA proportions - it is most unlikly that it would look bad - but the idea that you can model an accurate image from data that is rounded is not going to help you.
For instance the data I listed:
GIA can round this to 57% or 58%, 35 or 35.5, 40.8 or 41, 60 or 55%, and 80 or 85%.57.5% table, 35.25 crown angle, 40.9 pavilion angle, 57.5% star and 82.5% lower girdle?
The stone on the left is modeled with the smaller of each #, and on the right uses the larger #'s.
There is a big difference in their respective ideal-scope images, and their performance and spread.
I, and others, totally disagree with this assessment.Date: 4/11/2006 10:05:53 AM
Author: GeoAtl
Thank you all so VERY MUCH for your opinions and posts. Keep ''em coming! It sounds like most people here would take a higher HCA score over a new AGS 0 certification. In this particular case where the GIA diamond has a better HCA score than the AGS one, why is the market value of the latter higher?
i totally agree that we disagree with that assessment.Date: 4/11/2006 3:37:09 PM
Author: Paul-Antwerp
I, and others, totally disagree with this assessment.Date: 4/11/2006 10:05:53 AM
Author: GeoAtl
Thank you all so VERY MUCH for your opinions and posts. Keep ''em coming! It sounds like most people here would take a higher HCA score over a new AGS 0 certification. In this particular case where the GIA diamond has a better HCA score than the AGS one, why is the market value of the latter higher?
The new AGS-0 certification is based upon the actual 3D-scan of the diamond.
The HCA is based upon a few average numbers. In the case of these numbers coming from a GIA-report, these numbers are heavily rounded, on top of that. Therefore, the HCA-score is definitely less reliable.
Cut-wise, these 2 stones, are of similar quality, IF the GIA-figures are not all rounded towards the better direction.
Live long,
Hi GeoAtl,Date: 4/11/2006 1:43:02 PM
Author: Houseparty
I believe that both diamonds will sell in the next 30 days...
Sincerely,
David