The Good:As with most offshore-made items like this, the cast iron is pretty decent and the ground surfaces are flat and true, at least within my ability to measure it. That means it's accurate enough for what I do with it. For a basic home shop tilt table, it's ok and the price is right.The Ungood:The castings are nasty. Be careful on the bottom. It's a ground surface, and the edges are sharp enough to cut you. I had to take some time and break them over with a file. They're sharp right out of the box. The tilt mechanism is rough and the adjustment is very coarse. If you think you're just going to dial the angle right in, forget it. Use some other measurement method. Once you get it, tightening the lock screws will hold it. There's an angle scale on the side, and a barely legible witness mark, and I would take that with a grain of salt. The tee slots will accept a 3/8" screw, but not the tee nut that typically accompanies a set of hold down clamps of that size. I used a 3/8" hex nut, and it worked fine for what I was doing.