In this video I open a 1966 Topps Baseball Pack Series 2 in the hunt for a Jim Palmer rookie which is 25 k in a psa 10. There are a lot of hall of famers in the set. What an incredible pack to open.
Nice pull bud!! That’s crazy, great looking card though, I love vintage packs!! I once opened up a 67 cello pack and pulled out 2 mantles and a Carlton card, and made a nice little score!! Thanks for sharing
you know how people say old packs are searched... its like someone searched this pack and added that Palmer just for you to find it lol. Fantastic pull
Shane you are scaring me bruh.. I'm speechless. You must be the luckiest card breaker ever. Couple more videos like this will teleport you to 100k subs. Thanks for another crazy video.
I'm a simple man. I see a cardpackrip video, I click and like. Love your enthusiasm in your videos. My grandpa gave me my first auto which was the book lumpy, written by Tim Mcgraw. ROY in the card rip universe
Definitely not a pack that you will get your money back on...that being said, the Palmer PSA 8 card is selling for around 800 dollars as of 12/26/2022...doubt it will grade out as a 9 and definitely Not a 10... exactly like said, if you try making money on opening your own packs to make money, then he is right, you will be out of business real quick...glad he was doing it for thrill and personal collection
Right. 1986 fleer basketball pack is $1000 if not more. You'll be lucky to get $300 worth of cards back. I bought 50 1986 fleer basketball cards for $150. And all the stickers for $175 minus Jordan. That's almost 40 % of the set plus almost a complete sticker set for a little over $300.
Once trading card price guides came out, I always wondered why the first card and the last card in pretty much all vintage sets were worth a very significant premium over other cards, even if the player on the card was not a star. Then I saw an episode of a classic television show- cannot recall which one- in which several kids were trading cards to complete their sets. Every single kid had their stacks of cards held together with rubber bands. Every single one. I then realized that cards held together that way would result in damage to the front and edges of the card on top- which would almost certainly be the lowest number card in the stack- and damage to the last card in the stack- which would almost certainly be the highest number card in the stack.
I just saw him place the Palmer in his" PALM"? hit the corner of card into palm.Unbelievable! Don't shove a 52 Topps Mantle in this guys hand.This is a how not to hold cards video . Should be holding them from middle face in a pincers manner.
This would be my dream job! This channel gets the 15 yo in me going,my gf says yr not going to start collecting again..lol..That's awesome,Palmer card. If you want to give away that Bergman dress card ever!!
My name is John McCormick, my brother is Mike you can guess which card I want! The way you called the Palmer just before you pulled it..... Amazing!!!!! If you can ship me the card I'll forward the shipping. I was gonna sub even before you mentioned giving cards away so here's a sub and a like.
actually as I watch and catch up, yes, you are FIRE HOT LUCKY right now. I am still in shock! Do you express PSA grade that? Congrats. Becoming my favorite ripping channel.
Lynch, Pirates PH specialist. Vic Power, played for Cleveland. Very good hitter. Morehead, excellent starting pitcher. Jim Landis was all star with Chisox. Altman power hitting first baseman, Menke all star Braves catcher. McCormick was awesome with SF in late 60's early 70's. That was good pack no doubt and of course Palmer, Hall of Famer. He won game 2 of WS that year over Dodgers and Sandy Koufax. It was Koufax's last game.
Awesome awesome awesome. 1st-I can't believe you're opening these vintage high $$$ packs. 2nd-I can't believe you always hit the best card possible. Might be time to buy the 1952 Topps pack...🤑. You did not show the transfer/stamp from the back of the pack. I love the oddball items so if I win I would choose the insert. Thank you for sharing.