I don't disagree with any of that cordy, and there's no doubt that Hegner machines are indeed VERY well made.
All I'm saying is that these days you can get "more bang for your buck". 3 years ago I had the chance to try, hands on, both a comparable Hegner and an Excalibur side by side. As I wrote in my post then, there was no doubt in my mind that the Hegner definitely felt "better built" than the Excali, but the Excali I eventually chose was almost as well built I felt (without stripping both down impossible to be sure of course).
The reason I chose the Excali in the end was not only the tilting head (as opposed to the Hegner's tilting table) but was also the wider range of speeds, the capability to take other blades (e.g. junior hack saw blades and bits of broken band saw blade), and also the greater capacity - and all this at a lower price than the comparable Hegner!
I'm NOT trying to justify my own buying decision, simply pointing out that today, Hegner have, I guess, been lazy enough and/or arrogant enough to allow the competition to creep up from behind and overtake them in terms of "price to spec ratio". This often seems to happen with market leaders in all sorts of areas.
Fact is that both the Excali (and now the Axi version, which wasn't around when I bought my machine) and now the new Jet (which I haven't seen BTW) all offer a better "paper spec" at a lower price than Hegner. I also "feel" that in practice, my Excali has turned out to be just as good quality as the Hegner - 3 years after my Excali purchase I haven't had one moment of trouble.
Add to that not only the higher price of the machine but also the silly prices for Hegner spares and IMO anyway, excellent though they undoubtedly are, Hegner have got past their sell by date - as said, in terms of "spec to price ratio" anyway.