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The v.2 feature upgrade list includes much that is good, a few things that are a matter of personal preference and a few accessories that are not strictly necessary.
There is an argument for buying a v.1 at a discount and, then, performing tasks such as fingerboard edge tumbling yourself. A gloss finished neck can be lightly abraded to achieve a satin-matt feel. Pickups, you could upgrade yourself. This might be critically important if you require noise-free operation for stage or recording.
There is an argument to be made for finding one of the v.1 M2 or M3 models. Their pickup cavities should accept EMG40 series-compatible replacement pickups, giving you plenty of choice about how your instrument will sound.
I bought a 4 string V7 soon after they came out and when you could only get them from Thomann.I love it and it's versatile, decent-sounding and easy to play and has been serving me well for the last couple of years. It's hard to believe that this cost sub-£300 new at the time and even now, they're still well-priced and punch well above their weight.
I played their cheaper model (V3) more recently, which is mahogany instead of the more usual Alder or Ash, and I thought it was excellent. As always, you need to play a few of the same to find 'the one' but I may well invest in a black one of those as a spare.
Same wonderful preamp as my V7 and no idea how this company does it.
I tried a couple and settled on my one as I thought it was the best player of the bunch, but it was also the lightest (it's mahogany but weighs less than my Alder V7) and I've been told that Sire weights are somewhat inconsistent.