@mcmxi : This post is an aside from the main topic and related to your previous post:
I learned long ago no matter how good a machine or tool is, if it breaks and you can't get parts for it the whole thing is (usually) a write-off. If I buy a $30K Chinese machine instead of a $40K Japanese machine and 10 years from now a critical part is No Longer Available the whole $30K investment is now worth scrap value and at that point I'm faced with buying a now $80K machine (or no longer having that machine). If that machine is for business use and is expected to last 7 years and parts are available for 10 years that's well and fine, but if it's a buy-once/cry-once lifetime purchase that really sucks when it becomes a landscape feature you have to pay to get rid of.
This happens even with name brands when a standard changes. Say a mainstream flail mower manufacturer switches to a standardized flail and flails for your older mower are phased out, your whole mower is going to become less useful as flails break. Or as happened to me a major chainsaw manufacturer standardized on 3/8" chain and dropped 1/4" chain, the $1,000 saw powerheads no longer have a source of consumables. Or a major battery powered tools manufacturer changes from NiCd to Lithium and the NiCd batteries are NLA, the expensive multi-bay chargers are useless and the power tools require clunky plastic eBay adapters--not so handy now. The manufacturers could have made these things compatible, but didn't, and the consumer pays the price.
As attractive as Chinese brands are their governmental system doesn't lend itself to long-term company/brand stability, so all politics aside five to seven years from now a broken machine is likely and unfixable machine and for me that's not a good investment.