After nine days of auction action, the annual Barrett-Jackson event in Scottsdale wrapped up on Sunday having moved some $130 million worth of cars across the block.

The top sale spot at the auction went to a one-of-two-made 1966 Shelby Cobra 427 Super Snake numbered CSX 3015 which sold for $5.115 million. The seller, collector Ron Pratte, actually bought the Shelby himself at the Barrett-Jackson event in 2007 for $5 million.

This year's top sale almost never happend though as bidding on the rare Shelby stalled at around $4.7 million, short of the reserve price. Pratte later worked out the final sale price of $5.115 million with the top bidder.

Other top sales at this year's event included a 1954 Pontiac Bonneville Special Motorama concept car that earned Pratte $3.3 million and the Boyd Coddington-built "Whatthehaye" custom, which went for $671,000. Altogether, the headlining Ron Pratte collection sale made up more than $40 million of the overall sale total.

It wasn't all muscle cars and hot rods that brought home the big bucks in Scottsdale though as several European marques placed in the top 10, including a gorgeous 1949 Talbot-Lago T-26 Grand Sport Franay that crossed the block for $1.65 million, and a pristine Mercedes-Benz 300SL "gullwing" that went for $1.1 million.

Over the course of the week, 10 cars crossed also the block to raise money for charities. The biggest fundraiser of the event was the behemoth 1950 GM Futurliner Parade of Progress tour bus. Its entire $4 million sale price went directly to the Armed Forces Foundation. The yet-to-be-built, first-ever 2016 Shelby GT350R VIN #001, meanwhile drew a $1 million bid for JRDF, a group dedicated to curing diabetes. Ford CEO Mark Fields drove a pre-production GT350R across the auction block as a stand-in, but the actual car will be built to customer specifications. The first new 2016 Cadillac CTS-V, donated to the cause by General Motors, also raised $170,000 for charity.

It wasn't just sales that took place at the auction either as Ford also chose the event to unveil the 2016 Shelby Mustang GT. The 2016 Shelby GT sees a regular Ford Mustang GT upfitted with a supercharger good for 627 or more horsepower, plus performance wheels, tires, brakes and exhaust and a few visual enhancements as well. The price? $39,995—on top of the Mustang GT donor car.

“This year’s Scottsdale auction was on a scale unlike anything in our 44-year history,” Craig Jackson, chairman and CEO of Barrett-Jackson, said in a release at the event's close. “From sales and consignments to our ratings on Discovery and Velocity, we smashed records at every level."