I'm in my final stages of making grab rails.
soon I will need to sell my gear off but un sure what these are worth?
this is a heavy piece.
this is a bit smaller in size.
the big press that'll be spoken for,the guy who's buying my bender will more than likely want this.
he only want to my one type of grab rail so he will need this. is £100 asking to much?
the little in the next picture the spare punch is inc which will fit the frame.
all I'm looking for is a realistic price.
so if any one can help us out it'll be much apricated.
I've never sold any of this type of gear.
got another similar as the smaller punch..
shaft is 19mm bar this on all of them.
I have seen wanted adds for things like this on Facebook, somebody is asking for a particular size and wants it in a hurry, somebody offers one for £200 and they snap it up.
Or, you walk around a tool fair and a bloke has a table full of them at £20 each, nobody is buying and he let's you have 10 of them for £50.
these punches slots out on a plate etc.
OK thanks for your replies.
I'm not really bothered what they are worth as I've had my use out of them and paid for themselves over many a times.
they don't own anything,what ever I get is better than nothing.
these were use for this slot in picture.
As has been said, they are not really a commodity and have no defined target price. Clearly they have value but don't be fooled by the weight and solidity. The much larger and more versatile types of press tooling, the large square four post versions, can be had for £50-£100 on a regular basis. They're not rare and are really suited for use in a production environment so you'd ideally have a couple of dozen of them with a range of tooling so you can swap them in and out or set each up on a dedicated press.
For the hobbyist it makes about as much sense as having a capstan lathe set up for a one off job. You don't really need that sort of holder if you're happy to do the one time setup each time you need to swap a tool out.
So yeah, I'd snap one up for £20 and while I might hope to sell one for £50, if a couple of bidders need one NOW then the price can inflate thanks to a bidding war. I'd just punt them out with a low start, low reserve and keep my fingers crossed. If you were cheeky, you could advertise a couple of others at the same time with a huge b.i.n. in the hope that it makes your low start price auction look more desirable...
I would be more inclined to sell the tools and equipment needed as a collective lot with the idea of someone else taking over the rack making concern...that way each piece has more value together.