OK. My guy did not stay until the end of each day, but here are the results of what he did see. Of the 110 cars he saw go on the block, 63 did not meet the minimum estimate, 24 were spot on, 13 sold for more and 10 did not sell. Other interesting cars were: Isotta-Fraschini $400-500, sold for $275K, 1930 Austin Seven $20K-$30K sold for $15K, Fiat 850 Spider - a charity auction ,estimated value "anyone's guess" went for $22K, a 1932 Duesenberg listed at $750K-$1 million sold for $540K, Chrysler Town & Country $90K-$120K sold for $68K, Mercedes 450 SEL sedan at $15K-$20K brought only $7K, a beautiful 1934 Alvis Speed Sports Tourer, the only one in the US, at $150K-$200K went for $142,500.00.A Ferrari and a beautiful Pierce Arrow did well, exceeding their estimates but not by that much. There had to be a lot of disappointed owners - and don't forget the 10% commissions paid by buyers and sellers, plus $200 fee to be a bidder. If you look through the auction results and see a sale result you are interested in, let me know and I'll look up the estimate for you. So the bloom may be off the classic car market if the Hershey results are to be the norm.