A friend has sadly recently died and left his life-time collection of timber, hand tools, power tools and wood-turning blanks which his elderly partner now needs to re-home. I'm sure this situation has cropped up before, so I'm asking for advice as to how best to proceed. His partner is not in the best of health and she will need to release the capital tied up in this collection.
The heavy equipment includes a Wadkin AGS table-saw, a substantial cast James Gibbs scroll saw on stand, an Inca band-saw, Taylor-Hobbs model G? cutter grinder, Axminster 6" cast-iron jointer O/H planer, ditto small mortiser, Meddings floor-standing 1/2" pillar drill, and a couple of wood-turning lathes: Coronet + substantial Denford-Viceroy bowl-turning.
Stacked around the room which houses the lathes are about 150 bowl-blanks varying in size from c 5" up to 18" . There is also a quantity of timber (mixed sheet, softwood & hardwood sections).
I've not yet had chance to produce an inventory of the hand-tools, but there will be a lot of high-quality "Classic British" stuff.
A local dealer has offered £500 "for the lot", and whilst a dealer or dealers would be the least-hassle route to disposal, if they are all in the same mould as this example it would clearly be worth splitting and selling items off individually.
So, to summarise, all advice / experience welcomed, and especially guidance as to how best to find a good home for the turning blanks.
John
NB everything is single-phase.
The heavy equipment includes a Wadkin AGS table-saw, a substantial cast James Gibbs scroll saw on stand, an Inca band-saw, Taylor-Hobbs model G? cutter grinder, Axminster 6" cast-iron jointer O/H planer, ditto small mortiser, Meddings floor-standing 1/2" pillar drill, and a couple of wood-turning lathes: Coronet + substantial Denford-Viceroy bowl-turning.
Stacked around the room which houses the lathes are about 150 bowl-blanks varying in size from c 5" up to 18" . There is also a quantity of timber (mixed sheet, softwood & hardwood sections).
I've not yet had chance to produce an inventory of the hand-tools, but there will be a lot of high-quality "Classic British" stuff.
A local dealer has offered £500 "for the lot", and whilst a dealer or dealers would be the least-hassle route to disposal, if they are all in the same mould as this example it would clearly be worth splitting and selling items off individually.
So, to summarise, all advice / experience welcomed, and especially guidance as to how best to find a good home for the turning blanks.
John
NB everything is single-phase.