At any rate, compared to commonly accepted grading practices for some U.S. coins such as Morgan dollars, smaller coppers, etc., there don't seem to be any resources readily available for grading certain popular Russian series. For example, publications by PCGS and the ANA have gone a long way towards helping ordinary collectors distinguish between AU "slider" silver dollars, for example, and MS grades. Rick Snow used to have a very helpful, illustrated grading guide for Indian cents on his website.
I am sure that it is not possible to transfer the same principles 1-to-1 for grading these coins to grading Russian coins due to the varying technologies in striking, especially for coins struck before 1844. And even for coins minted between 1844 and 1917, there seem to be great differences in what is commonly considered to be XF, AU and MS grades. Sellers also tend to grossly overgrade their coins. Here is a case in point: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewI...em=250225874167 Aside from the large amount of wear which by itself would keep this coin from grading over VF in most slabs (IMHO), there is no mention of the numerous filing marks at 6 o'clock and planchet flaw around the same area on the reverse.
What can be done to improve this situation? Maybe we could take some common series which has coins in all grades readily available, e.g. the Romanov 1913 Tercentenary rouble, the 1877 business-strike rouble, or earlier copper such as Catherine II 5 kopeks, and set up a collection of images here on this forum for reference purposes. Slabbed coins would be helpful, but certainly wouldn't be the "absolute" reference. We could vote on the grade and publish the results here.
What do YOU think? Do we need this?

