If the MK2 is reasonable then what is there to loose, you should be able to sell it if down the road if you feel it’s not what you thought it would be. Only way to know is to own one. I am somewhat in the same boat having spend all my airgun funds funds and April brings our biggest Airgun Show. I bought probably 8 vintage airguns in the last couple months and the MK2 is the one that I will probably never part with. Classic, iconic are easily overused words but when I got my MK2 the weather was so bad all I could do is look at it propped up in a chair for a month or hold it. That was enough to know, it’s just a work of art. Yesterday it was 70 degrees and I found out it could shoot as well. To me that was just a bonus. If in April I see a Webley MK3, I will have no remorse.