We take great care with the grading of our second hand vinyl.
Is vinyl grading subjective.
Many people have different opinions about how to interpret record grading standards.
There are also different standards such as the goldmine standard or the vjm record grading system.
In other words there s no such thing as vg for its age the same criteria used in grading a record pressed in 1965 exist for one pressed in 2015.
Grading a vinyl record is inherently subjective but knowing what to look for will help you accurately determine what condition a record is in.
Well this is incredibly subjective as different gear will handle thrashed records differently.
Since grading vinyl records can be subjective there have been some effort to standardize a grading guide.
The degree is all subjective so good luck.
Then we will.
A record doesn t always play like you think it will based on how the vinyl appears visually.
We clean records before grading but recommend cleaning your records before you play them.
Grading is always subjective and if you purchase a record from us and feel the grade does not live up to the rating we have provided it.
If in doubt go down.
And the other way round.
We primarily use the widely accepted record collector magazine grading system and adopt a cautious approach to grading each record.
That being said i think the absolute minimum grading would be a record that doesn t skip so i believe that would be a good grading if using the goldmine scale.
So far i think i m doing okay on this but i know i m not perfect.
Record grading can be a rather subjective practice that has very objective expectations.
Vintage records can have unexpected noise so w e offer free returns to address unforeseen issues.
Please explain meaningfully to any site user what the differences between a g and g and vg and vg and now a vg cd disc would be.
If vinyl sellers buyers want a more refined grading system for vinyl then the grading systems for different media are going to have to be differentiated.
I find the terms on discogs grading scale to focus more on the vinyl then the sleeve.
Goldmine developed the guide below and it is now the most widely used guide for the buying and selling of vinyl albums.
Many 50 s 60 s vinyl especially in mono can look very different than how they play.
Grading 30 50 year old vinyl records is highly subjective and we do our best to minimize issues.
One confusing thing to me is the difference between vg g.
Note that grading standards do not change based on the age of the record.