Dennis,
There are deals out there if you know the market, what you are looking for, and how much you're willing to pay. I seem to find a good deal on something I need a couple of times a year; not every week. Just for encouragement, here are some of the better ones:
Powermatic 1150 drill press $75
DiAcro five station sheetmetal work table from a school 12" shear, finger break and slip roll plus a corner notcher and #0 bender $400
DiAcro 24" B&P break $250
Large tote full of aircraft SM tools, riveting equipment etc $75
52" JET stomp shear unused $700
HECK Trace A Punch $100 Needed new punch and die set so really $200
Roper-Whitney 218 punch with stand $175
#2 beverly shear $200. I use it a lot just because it's pleasant to use
KAMA 996 swiveling cut off saw $229 (and a lot of clean up) It's a great saw.
!0" Taiwan metal lathe $200
Point being, there is stuff out there if you look diligently. You are in a part of the country where the kind of stuff you are looking for should be pretty plentiful. Good luck on your quest.
Geezus - a Kama 996 saw for $229? That's a total steal, right now adding a bandsaw is on my short list and those go for around $3500 new
To answer the OP's question - and reiterate what a number of other people have said: be persistent, and know what you're looking for and you'll find deals.
I've scored a few over the years . I put together a Lincoln Mobiflex 400 welding fume extractor for a grand total of about $1200 a couple of years ago. Bought the unit with the long arm cheap from Ebay - sold the long arm - and then found a short arm (fits in my garage better) for cheap money.
I just picked up a pallet load of brand new Bessey 10" and 12" welding clamps for $200. Again some guy on Ebay who didn't know what he had.
I picked up a Diacro #4 bender a couple of years back - brand new - for $1500.
Got a LandPride 60" mower for the back of my tractor a few years back for $500. Not new - but in decent shape , for something that normally goes for about $1400 used in this area.
To get deals you've got to look around - and sometimes be willing to piece things together. You'll find companies selling equipment that don't know what it is - or just want it gone. You'll find people selling equipment that is "broken" - and in reality just needs a part replaced.
I think searching for cheap stuff is a skill. To learn it you've got to start doing it.