It does bring up a couple of interesting points tho.....
At some point in your life you realize that you probably aren't going to be puttering around in the shop the rest of your life, much as you might like to or think you will and maybe you don't really need the whole garage full of tools you've collected over the years, so what should you do with them now?
If you have kids who live nearby and can/will use them, it seems natural to ask them if they want them......but......
My kids live on opposite ends of the country from me, getting several thousand pounds of tools to them would be expensive, and then what do they do with them once they no longer need them?
On top of that, if you could sell them, maybe it's more important that you keep the money to live on? It's getting really expensive to live in this country, especially if you're on fixed income or only SS.
I don't know if either of my kids would want my tools, my son already has a pretty good collection of his own, and my daughter really doesn't need them or have a place to keep them. One of my two grandsons might want them, but thats a few years off yet, and where would he put them as he moves thru his last years of school and starts his life?
Getting rid of them before I'm too old (or dead) might be a good idea.
In addition to all the tools I've collected and used thruout my life, I have a big wooden box that my great grandfather made (he was a carpenter) full of old handtools that I've enjoyed having and using - because they connected me to my great grandfather and my dad who gave them to me - but what am I going to do with them? The box is nothing special in terms of it's construction and the tools are just garden variety stuff for it's time and while they may have sentimental value to me, I doubt they do to my kids.
I guess the real message here is to talk to your kids, grandkids, nephews or whatever and plan ahead?