Opinion.
The complete "rig" as you describe is worth the sum of its constituent parts, no more. Without provenance (bringback papers and pre-capture combination, for instance) there is no true historic association of the gun with its accessories, it is just a collection of...stuff. The matching mag scenario is different, and is properly a value-enhancing part of the gun itself (if not counterfeit!).
What you have described does not constitute a rig in my eyes.
To me, a "rig" would be a Luger and a holster with some kind of connection--a Police pistol with a matching unit marked holster and tool, or an Imperial unit marked gun with matching unit marked holster, or a Navy or LP-08 with matching-numbered stock-holsters. A unit-marked Imperial Luger with a holster marked to the same unit, but with different weapon numbers, does not truly constitute a "rig", but I might be willing to pay a small premium for the combination. Same with a Police marked not-quite-set.
Opinion off.
I talked to an acquaintance on the phone last night, a guy who acquires Lugers occasionally and mostly passes them on. In the course of the conversation--not having anything to do with this discussion--he mentioned that when he gets a Luger with a holster he usually sells them separately, he finds that he can get a bit more money for them thtat way.
Its true that he doesn't often have the top 98-percentile Lugers, and he doesn't break up truly matching sets.
--Dwight
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