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Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2004
- Messages
- 840
I read this in an article on theknot.com. Any comments?
1. PEGASUS DIAMONDS
The SCAM: The latest dud to hit the market is the Pegasus Diamond (also known as the Monarch), basically an inexpensive brown or yellow diamond that has been heated at such a high temperature and pressure that the nitrogen or boron (which gives it color) is baked out and the diamond appears white. This color enhancement has two fatal flaws: The process is undetectable to labs and independent appraisers and it renders the stone extremely brittle! Moreover, treated diamonds have little or no secondary market value.
The SOLUTION: If you are springing for a high-quality rock (over $5,000), ask the jeweler about a bonding document. Bonded diamonds are guaranteed to be 100% natural and have a lifetime breakage policy, a lifetime buy back policy, an unconditional lifetime exchange policy, a lifetime trade-in policy, a fixed appreciation rate (to keep pace with inflation), and a market crash protection policy. The catch? Bonded diamonds cost 10-15% above non-bonded diamonds, only 5% of jewelers are bonded and, of those, most offer only partially bonded stones.
1. PEGASUS DIAMONDS
The SCAM: The latest dud to hit the market is the Pegasus Diamond (also known as the Monarch), basically an inexpensive brown or yellow diamond that has been heated at such a high temperature and pressure that the nitrogen or boron (which gives it color) is baked out and the diamond appears white. This color enhancement has two fatal flaws: The process is undetectable to labs and independent appraisers and it renders the stone extremely brittle! Moreover, treated diamonds have little or no secondary market value.
The SOLUTION: If you are springing for a high-quality rock (over $5,000), ask the jeweler about a bonding document. Bonded diamonds are guaranteed to be 100% natural and have a lifetime breakage policy, a lifetime buy back policy, an unconditional lifetime exchange policy, a lifetime trade-in policy, a fixed appreciation rate (to keep pace with inflation), and a market crash protection policy. The catch? Bonded diamonds cost 10-15% above non-bonded diamonds, only 5% of jewelers are bonded and, of those, most offer only partially bonded stones.