How to dispose of your system?


A lot of us are getting to the age where  we may start thinking about what will happen to our precious systems when we’re gone?  Will they be sold in pieces, breaking up the synergy we’ve worked so hard to establish? That seems to me to be criminal.  
What about trying to sell the whole system, kit and kaboodle, maybe to a member of this forum? Would anyone, perhaps a novice, be willing to pay for a very finely tuned instrument? 
If the system cost say,  $35K to put together, what would a fair price be?

rvpiano

I have made and kept up to date a spreadsheet with my system, what I paid for it and what each unit's original list price - I bought most of it on close-out or used. As I have been pronounced "terminal" sometime in the next year, I check the "sold" category on eBay for recent prices and update the sold prices on a regular basis. My wife won't care what it brings, just so it's gone. She doesn't share the hobby but lets me enjoy it.

I don't want my wife to get ripped off if I drop dead. I'm going to start selling things off in the next year or so. Whatever is left, I'd rather see donated rather than sold to lowballers. Sadly, very few people want this stuff anymore.

Sadly, very few people want this stuff anymore.

True, and yet:

Whatever is left, I'd rather see donated rather than sold to lowballers.

"Lowballers" or legit buyers willing to pay today's market price? Which is drastically lower than wishful thinking and the enticing prism of nostalgia suggest?

And then you wonder why nothing sells.

I am a retired CFP, Certified Financial Planner.  I worked in a trust and estate law office for 8 years.  We told people that if they were going to leave gifts ($) when they died yet could afford to give those gifts at that time, do so.  This allows the beneficiaries to say thank you and you to see the enjoyment on their faces. 

As for audio equipment, if you can, give it away now when you can help set it up and see the joy you have given.  Try a group that helps refugees.  There may be someone who was an engineer in a past life who can enjoy setting up a system that s/he could never afford.

Second, take a look at Happy Money by two psychologists,  Dunn and Norton.  It will change, for the better, how you think about money.

Finally, talk with an experienced trust attorney.  Well worth the money.  

 

  

After all us Boomers die out no one is going to want it, much less care about its synergy. Most likely they'd be listening to it in a different room anyway.

I made a list of all my possessions that have value and just recommended a price comparison check. That's as simple as asking an AI chatbot what it's worth. I'm not going to worry about something I won't be able to worry about.