At $ 1,500 you would be paying the premium because the gun is "NIB".
To shoot it , , you will be dropping it down to around $ 1,200 after your first trip to the range. You also have to think about the future. Leave the gun NIB and expect an additional 20% increase in value over the next 5 years, shoot it and the value has leveled off with a 0 % increase in the next 5 years. If it were me personally, and I wanted a 29-2 to shoot and not as an investment , I would simply buy a real nice 97 % at $ 1,000 and shoot it and it will still be worth $ 1,000 next week.
I would leave the NIB gun to a collector who will appreciate the gun for exactly what it is , and save yourself hundreds of dollars in the process. After all, once you shoot this one a few times, and clean it a few times, , it then becomes a $ 1,000 97 % gun that is easily found available
on any given day at all the big gun shows and armslist and guns international and gunbroker etc. etc.
and can never again be the premium high-end quality collectable that it is in this moment in time.
Lewis
President of the Smith & Wesson preservation society