If the camera does not show a lot of wear marks (rubs, "brassing" on the usual "touch-surfaces"), I would presume that it was lightly (infrequently) used, and that any lube is probably dried-up and ineffective.
As a general rule of thumb, if the shutter "shrieks" or "squawks" when you fire it, it is crying for a CLA, and it's best to get it done soon, otherwise you will be wearing-out rare factory parts, and running-up your repair bill for when you do send it in.
I think this is espcecially true of focal plane shutters, as the parts have further to travel, higher spring tension, etc.
"Between the lens shutters", such as Compur, Prontor, Copal, etc, are more "self-protective": when they reach a critical state of "dry lube", they usually just stop working altogether.
My experience with LTM shutters is that they have a characteristic "shhhoop!" when fired, or "shup----shhhoop!" on speeds below 1/20th, but there should be no metallic sounds: squeaks, shrieks, etc.
If you want to try a home-brew diagnostic, remove the lens from the camera, and put a body-cap (if you have one) over the lens mount, then set your oven on the lowest temp (not over 100 F: verify with an accruate oven thermometer!!!), and put your LTM on its back on a clean cookie-sheet, and let it warm for about an hour.
When the time is up (toothpick comes-out clean 🙄), remove the cookie sheet and camera (use an oven-mitt or pot-holder!), then remove camera from sheet and let cool for about 5 minutes, until you can comfortably handle it with bare hands.
Now sit down in front of the telly and run the shutter through all its speeds several times, noting any unusual noises or odd behavior.
If you seen some improvement, keep working it for about 15 minutes, then put it aside overnight.
Next day, run the shutter through its range of speeds, and see how it behaves; if the "bad noises" have returned, it needs CLA , don't use it too much until you have it serviced.
If the shutter has quieted down, you may have bought some additional operating time.
If putting the camera in the oven sounds too risky, and you live in a warm climate, you could try leaving the camera body in the glovebox of your car, parked in the sun for the day, then try working the camera around supper time... here in the Northeastern US, it's quite common for the interior of a car to reach 120 to 140 deg F on a hot day.
I've used this trick many times with folding cameras with Compur shutters, and they usually free-up, until they cool down again.
Have not had to do this with a focal-plane shutter.
Have not killed any cameras yet.
If your camera is in really nice cosmetic shape, I would strongly suggest sending it out for service rather than fiddling-around, and possibly causing harm.
Just my few cents'-worth.
Good luck !
Luddite Frank