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- Aug 15, 2000
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Its such a shame that they are letting these varying pavilion mains make it to Excellent. I concur with @Rockdiamond. I visited a family friend this past week and we were looking at diamonds. There were several GIA G's that we both raised our eyebrows at...to our eyes, they were solid H color. I hope this is a blip and not a trend.
Definitely. That's an unavoidable by-product of cross-working the mains to chase an average, not a consistent target. The ASET reveals what lurks beneath.Roughly .5 degrees variation on the mains.
Its a lot but not that huge.
The lower halves/girdle facets are another story they are twisted like pretzels.
Boom. You nailed it. Nicely correlated and explained with DiamCalc.End result – 3 steep deep interactions and a dead facet. In each case the variations are smaller than the boundaries GIA would have programmed in to the scanner![]()
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Well that's uplifting. Thank you @bmfang . In fact I'm going to print this and show it to my wife the next time we argue.Love reading your posts @Karl_K and @John Pollard. Always come out feeling a little smarter and more knowledgeable after reading a thread that the two of you contribute to!
I don't know about colour but when I began reading here in 2002, lots of the experts who were dealers were saying that clarity had taken a large nosedive from what it was, it was at this time, it was written that we need to check SI1 clarity with our eyes to see if it is eyeclean, as in the previous years SI1 was always eyeclean and that was the definition of SI1 and before they started telling us to check with our own eyes, they used to say if we could see something it was DEFINITELY not an SI1 but an SI2 or worse as SI1 is always eyeclean. It seems that the old SI1 is now VS2 or a bit higher.
Us 'oldies' know that diamonds graded by GIA and other labs decades ago that have been resubmitted usually (more than often, but not always) come back with better Clarity grades today.I've never read that SI1 should be eye clean... actually, VS2 clarity isn't always eye clean. Also, the type of inclusion(s), grade-setting inclusion(s), and the placement of those inclusions play a huge role in whether or not a stone is eye clean. I've seen SI2's that were completely eye clean, but VS2's that had a visible inclusion on the table. There are a lot of factors that determine if a specific clarity graded stone will be eye clean, hence the importance of being able to see the report and stone.
I hate to say this, but GIA is definitely having some "growing and contracting pains".
We've also noticed some inconsistencies with color/clarity....
Love all dealers posts.
Kudos to Garry H here though who has discovered why asset scopes are showing more leaking now and yet getting GIA excellent. The diamcalc ray tracing is THE proof of what is going on.
This could absolutely be attributable to our vastly different locations- but I do find plenty of eye clean SI2 diamonds that have no cloudiness issues whatsoever. Without a doubt, there's plenty of horrible SI2's- particularly in inventories that have been picked through. Looking at new productions will produce entirely different proportion of bad SI2'sUs 'oldies' know that diamonds graded by GIA and other labs decades ago that have been resubmitted usually (more than often, but not always) come back with better Clarity grades today.
In maybe the 1980's I1 = eye visible - but probably only up to about 1ct. VS2 in a 100ct diamond would likely have always been eye visible.
I rarely see a +1ct SI2 that is eyeclean and if it is, then at least 90% of those will have coulds that dull the stone. Give me a few hard to see grade makers that I can put under a prong anyday over a dull diamond.
Theoretically, it should be the case that a single location is more consistent than a lab with multiple locations- but the reality is that diamond grading is subjective. So even in a single location, different graders may come up with slightly different results.@Rockdiamond or @John Pollard
Isn't consistency more difficult when there are multiple locations? How many labs does GIA have around the world? Correct me if I am wrong but AGSL has one location in Las Vegas where standards can be more tightly controlled?![]()
msop It definitely was said that SI1 was always eyeclean. This is why I got paranoid about my own SI1 I had a the time and although it was a small stone I was told I should not be able to see anything in it and I could. It may have been the predecessor of Pricescope board I was on, but all the dealers were there at the time and they all agreed SI1 should be eyeclean. Then as the years went by, they started saying 'may not be eyeclean' so the standard changed, they even said the old GIA standards were more strict than they are now.
@Rockdiamond DaveTheoretically, it should be the case that a single location is more consistent than a lab with multiple locations- but the reality is that diamond grading is subjective. So even in a single location, different graders may come up with slightly different results.
Plus, for every stone AGSL grades GIA probably grades 1000- so there's that too.....
@Rockdiamond Dave
Did you ever find out if 3 GIA graders had to agree like the old days before a lab report is issued? I posted an old report of one of my diamonds with 3 sets of initials on it on another thread.
msop It definitely was said that SI1 was always eyeclean. This is why I got paranoid about my own SI1 I had a the time and although it was a small stone I was told I should not be able to see anything in it and I could. It may have been the predecessor of Pricescope board I was on, but all the dealers were there at the time and they all agreed SI1 should be eyeclean. Then as the years went by, they started saying 'may not be eyeclean' so the standard changed, they even said the old GIA standards were more strict than they are now.
What I find fascinating is the perceptions of different people in the diamond trade based on what they are seeing in their location and how much it varies.
For example lets say a dealer buys every eye clean si1 of a certain make that a supplier shows them.
The supplier being a smart person notices this and shows the person more eye clean si1 diamonds.
As time goes by the dealer starts thinking wow there are a lot more eye clean si1 because I am rejecting so few of them.
Some markets sadly have traditionally been a dumping ground.
The supplier has something that was rejected in other markets will then sell it into one those markets.
That colors the opinions of those dealers and they may be thinking there are no eye clean si1s anymore.
Two different opinions, both true for them but not representative of the entire market.
With more and more diamonds being bought off large lists and much shorter pipelines that is changing but it still holds somewhat true.