Being a scientist, I carefully read the indepenant lab certification comparison, and found it very interesting. Thanks to all who made it possible.
If you don''t know what I''m talking about See http://grading.pricescope.com/
So I recently bought by diamond, a GIA certed stone b/c my girlfriend had previously mentioned that she had heard "the other labs were less reputable" and I thought it best not to dispute this, but follow her wishes. After all I am buying it to make her happy.
However, here is the buying scheme I cooked up and wanted to hear what you all thought.
Based on the 2004 report, it seemed like the EGL discount was greater than it should be because peoples'' perceptions of EGL laxity in grading are inflated. 4 of the 17 stones (11,12,15, 16) were graded the same or stricter than GIA by EGL and three of the stones(10,7,6) traded a color grade for a clarity grade - we''ll call this a wash.
Therefore, I was thinking about having 5 or so EGL rated, AGA 1a proportioned, stones sent to an appraiser for their opinion on color and clarity alone. Statistically, EGL should have rated one of these stones the same or stricter than GIA and I could benifit from the 9%-15% discount without settling for a weaker stone. I bet that this discount would be larger than the appraiser fee for stones in the 1ct and higher range.
If you don''t know what I''m talking about See http://grading.pricescope.com/
So I recently bought by diamond, a GIA certed stone b/c my girlfriend had previously mentioned that she had heard "the other labs were less reputable" and I thought it best not to dispute this, but follow her wishes. After all I am buying it to make her happy.
However, here is the buying scheme I cooked up and wanted to hear what you all thought.
Based on the 2004 report, it seemed like the EGL discount was greater than it should be because peoples'' perceptions of EGL laxity in grading are inflated. 4 of the 17 stones (11,12,15, 16) were graded the same or stricter than GIA by EGL and three of the stones(10,7,6) traded a color grade for a clarity grade - we''ll call this a wash.
Therefore, I was thinking about having 5 or so EGL rated, AGA 1a proportioned, stones sent to an appraiser for their opinion on color and clarity alone. Statistically, EGL should have rated one of these stones the same or stricter than GIA and I could benifit from the 9%-15% discount without settling for a weaker stone. I bet that this discount would be larger than the appraiser fee for stones in the 1ct and higher range.