Ive this one at home.
Thoughts
Could be better.
The fence is ok, but the markings for the angles are near impossible to read, and its not a smooth action setting it up, more jerky which is a total pain trying to get something exactly right.
Supplied knives I think are made of soft cheese or that could be just me
Thicknesser, especially on hard hardwood like maple its got a tendency to vibrate, which to me would indicate a lack of pressure from the rollers, but its ok, though again roller pressure tends to be poor in that its best to help a board go through. Tendency to snipe at the end , due to the short bed- here I'd recommend strongly making an extension by laying a melamine covered thick board on it.
There are safety switches under the table to be activated by the plastic dust chute, which isnt needed in my opinion, and are a total pain in the proverbial trying to sit the chute so it catches them, especially with the handle being at the opposite end.
I forgo the chute in place of a bit of timber, which is easier to hold in place as you raise the table to engage it. Here youre working blind by feel, and its totally dumb. In fact i nearly had a sparks take the F£$%^& thing off its that tricky.
If i had the choice again i'd have gone with a stand alone thicknesser(axminster spiral) and a stand alone planer(axminster CT1502), or had the room, a 2nd hand cast iron affair. Or maybe one of the trade rated, step up ones like the axminster AW106PT2
But at the time that was all i could afford.
Suggestion - save and buy something like the AW106. Doesnt have to be axminster, but of that type rather than the cheapest.