We've all seen those car restoration videos where old metal is worth eye-wateringly high prices. Well, this is not one of those. John Clay Wolfe takes us on an adventure to discover a massive barn find collection of more than 70 cars left behind by David, a Honda dealer and lifelong car buyer who snapped them up at auctions over the years. With the estate needing to be cleared out, Wolfe is there to send them all to auction. But rather than silly money being thrown around, his estimates give a true reflection of what car dealers pay to get a profit out of old metal. These figures are going to be surprising for a totally different reason. The Barn Find Of Over 70 Cars Couldn't Be more Eclectic YouTube/ John Clay Wolfe Wolfe is a radio DJ and the founder of used car site GiveMeTheVIN.com. Over the years, Wolfe has bought and sold more than half a million cars, so few people know more about what sells, and for how much. In his latest YouTube video, Wolfe is in Talladega, Alabama, deep diving into a massive collection of cars that were bought at auction and left scattered around a large property. Around 25 of the best cars are in the four garages, but most are left to the elements outside.As Wolfe says: "This isn't your typical polished showroom tour...this is raw, gritty, and full of mold, rust, and reentry-burned paint. We're making quick decisions, marking off the spreadsheet, and trying to move these cars before the Alabama weather does any more damage." Anyone watching the video is going to be shocked by not only the cars that are found, but how much Wolfe estimates they are worth before going to auction at Manheim Dallas, Chicago, and California. You'll Be Shocked To Hear The Prices These Cars Are Worth To Dealers Before we get to the highlights, there are plenty of pretty ordinary cars scattered around. Anyone fancy a 2003 Honda Element? Or a faded MGB GT? Or perhaps a Nissan Sentra SE-R (B13) two-door? Actually yes to the last one. Then there are CR-Vs, Odysseys, and third- and fourth-generation Civics, the latter probably being of a lot of interest to some JDM fans. But here's where you might start wishing you got to the lot before Wolfe, with the presenter declaring the '87 Civic as a "$100 car".Then there is a 1972 Buick Riviera: a "$1,000 car". Or how about a red 1983 race-bred RX-7? That'll be four grand. And this is the rub. While the right collector will pay a lot more for these cars, and 1983 RX-7s have an average price of $14,736 (Classic.com), by the time you've cleaned them, shipped them, and made sure they actually work, the four grand is a reasonable price, it seems. Then it gets even more interesting. The Collection Has Some Sought-After Cars YouTube/ John Clay WolfeGoing into the garages reveals the more interesting cars. There are Corvettes everywhere, but also a 1979 Trans Am with a CB radio ($10,000 estimate), Oldsmobile 442s (Wolfe jokingly says $500 on that one), plus a 1969 Cougar, a Chevrolet Chevelle with a 350 ($15,000), a Jaguar XK (not for sale), and a '90s Impala SS ($15,000) which packs a detuned Corvette engine. The last one really piques Wolfe's interest, with him saying it would be the only one he'd be interested in at auction when he sees it.The video seems to have caused quite a stir, with Wolfe pinning a disclaimer to the bottom: "Those were my rough in estimates, I paid considerably more after we sat down to reach sellers total number he wanted...Some will sell less some more than I figured, I work a cost average." The upside is that the cars will be at auction, so, hey, anyone can bid on them.