Interesting topic, Dan....I think about the vintage drum market often, as I have a half-dozen COB and Aluminum Ludwig snares that are in excellent-plus condition. I don't intend to play them, so I should sell them, but I'm patiently waiting for the market to visibly improve (recover to what it seemed to be pre-pandemic.)
I get a Reverb and Ebay feed on my email every day, re: Ludwig snares and kits, and I don't think the market has recovered at all yet. Sure, guys ask stupid money for stuff, but then a month or two later, I see the same items annotated with "price drop" and "seller is accepting offers."
Very clean born-together 1960s Ludwig shell-packs are listed anywhere from $3000 (overseas sellers) to $1200 (stateside sellers), but I don't see much movement. I think they were selling for nearer to $2000 pre-pandemic.
But then again, surprises happen. The other day someone had a 1950s COB WFL Super Ludwig for sale for $2000 Buy It Now. It was really clean and factory-original, but I didn't think it was worth more than maybe $1200 max. Well, it sold in 1 day! "Just gotta have it!" (I know I've been guilty of that.)
I attended the Chicago drum show in May, and there were a lot of very nice vintage Ludwig snares and shell packs for reasonable (I thought) prices. After all, the dealers didn't want to have to pack them all up and take them home. But on Sunday afternoon, I noticed - that it appeared to me, that very few actually sold. I found that discouraging and I'm sure the vendors were more discouraged.
I'm not a buyer/seller wheeler-dealer and I no longer collect, but it appears to me that the vintage drum market is still deflated, because of the economy. I wonder how much Steve Maxwell gets for similar kits. I know his list prices are always high, but I wonder what the actual selling price is.
From my very small observatory!
Regards, mb