azhun,
Your table is a Hunzinger form I haven't seen yet so thanks for sharing with us. I'll let others comment on their position, which may be different from mine, but I don't think the added clear coat will subtract anything from price on this table. In my opinion, utilitarian tables such as this and the game table, which are more simple in design and lighter finishes don't draw the big numbers that other Hunzinger pieces have recently been getting.
Per the Barry Harwood book, "The conservatism in design that was noted in the 1880s becomes more pronouced in the 1890s. The new forms, particularly tables, discussed below, are surprisingly unornamented and cumbersome in comparison with Hunzinger's earlier designs. The simplicity of the furniture of the 1890s, which was often made of oak, may have been Hunzinger's attempt to adapt and interpret the tenets of the Arts and Crafts Movement, which were beginning to influence both progressive designers and commercial manufacturers looking for the next trend. In addition to the use of oak, the preferred, humble material of the movement, Hunzinger also employed plank construction and refrained from utilizing the lathe to create turned decoration - on which he had so long depended and which had given his furniture its unique character."
As a result, these tables and the game tables tend to draw three-digit values and in cases such as a recent game table may not sell at all or for a few hundred. Yours is the largest of his tables that I have seen which are usually square with integrated chairs (like the patent on Emeriol's blog) or round like the game tables - one you can see
here:
Thanks very much for sharing.