This. Also, Usually some local "friend/expert" comes by and states a bunch of high values for this and that etc, Then the family has that stuck in their head and is very reluctant to sell for 1/2 to 1/4 of that. I am also going thru this right now.
-I just saw a video the other day, of one of those "urban explorers", checking out an abandoned foundry/machine shop. Small-town blackmithy/repair shop type of thing. Could nice anvils, a ton of tongs, a power hammer, a couple of lineshaft-era lathes, an old shaper, etc. Neat little time capsule.
And in a shop with a clearly leaky roof- the power hammer and shaper were covered in ice from a steady stream of meltwater off the roof, everything in the room was covered in rust, a bunch of what was in there was literal scrap (as in raw bar stock, cut-off sections of bar, etc.) and so on.
Not
totally valueless, of course, but everything was in varying states of sad shape, and would need lots of work to get them useable again. (Except maybe the anvils.)
Somebody in the comments declared it a treasure trove, saying the entire contents must surely be worth in excess of $100,000. They're machine tools, first of all, and everyone knows
those are extremely valuable, and better still, everything is
antique, which makes them more valuable still.
The truth being that if you auctioned it all off in lots, you
might get as much as $5K. The anvils were in good shape, as were most of the tongs, and surely some of the other tooling was too. But two-thirds of what was in the shop would go for scrap- as in literal scrap price, of maybe a couple bucks a ton.
BUT... somebody might read that comment, think that
their line-shaft-era lathe is in better condition, and is thus worth $5K all by itself.
Doc.