Jack covered it well. I buy and sell estates as a business, so I'll give you a couple more insights, from my perspective. First, don't offer anything for sale until you have it all sorted and organized, to the best you can in the space you have. Here's my rationale; I see this a lot. People want to clear out stuff, and go pick out a few things and list them. Interested parties come to buy, and ask if you have anything else. You show them the stuff, they pick out a few things, make a pile, and make you an offer. THAT OFFER IS ALWAYS VERY LOW, AND THE STUFF THEY PICK OUT IS THE MOST SALEABLE/VALUABLE. After two or three people do this, you find the remaining stuff is very hard to sell. You get discouraged. You hire an estate seller, and they come and look and you tell them about the stuff you sold. They tell you that they can sell the rest, but you gave up most of the value for a low price in the stuff the pickers already took. If you are able, sell it all yourself for the greatest return. Sell the rifles alone, and the accessories separate. Buyers want the accessories for free or cheap if you group them. Sell on ebay and gunbroker for the best prices and least problems. Don't sell out of your house to people that come over, and unless you really want to help personal friends, don't sell to acquaintances. Some of them will be scoundrels and rob you blind. If you want to sell easily and for a fair price, I'd suggest contacting Joe Dobrzynski and see if he would take it on. He does a great job of selling on both ebay and gunbroker, as well as here on the ASSRA forum. If you do want to sell as a lot, take a good inventory, and ask buyers to give you a breakdown, at least of the high value items, and of the reloading/ammo/small stuff as groups or lots. That gives you a way of evaluating the fairness of the bid. Don't expect to pick and choose what you sell to them based on their breakdown, lot buyers make their money by the law of averages, they win some and lose some, but if you choose which pieces you sell, they will want to give a lower price for the lots you sell to them. Get two or three bids on the inventory, and compare them before you make a decision. Not to be too self serving, but if you want to sell as a lot, I'd give you a bid, if there's enough to make it interesting to drive cross country. I've done that before. My wife would like to go to NYC, so that would be an incentive, too!
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