I had one. It was pretty good (but it was an older version than yours).
They can be very accurate. Treat it to a nice new Freud blade - you'll be amazed how good that can be, but watch out as Freuds are narrower kerf than the stock Kity blade, so the riving knife might be too thick. Riving knives for the older TS200 (Axminster) will fit and are thin enough and cheap.
Be gentle with the tilt gearing: try not to scuff the cogs when altering the rise & fall: it's steel on glass reinforced plastic, and if you destroy the teeth, the complete handwheel is about 40 quid to replace (or so I believe - happy to be corrected if more expensive). You can probably set up the tilt clamp/lock so the assembly moves freely when it's released - you can then tilt the blade by hand (not using the gear quadrant), lock it off somewhere close, then do the final adjustment with only a small cog movement - will save a lot of wear.
There's a 90 degree adjustment stop inside the saw, which you can get at by removing the LEFT side plate (as you look at it normally). The two pairs of countersunk bolts either end of the blade allow you to loosen the trunnion so you can align it with the mitre slots - it's a fiddle, soif you have the design with separate nuts (two per end) underneath, make sure you have a spanner that will fit before loosening them off (10mm from memory).
Dust extraction is not good. "They're all like that , sir" as is the TS 200 and family. Lots of discussions on here as to how to "improve" it (not necessarily productive IMHO. Mine (third hand) simply had a hopper/chute underneath and a requirement to hoover it out every so often. Some people cut off the side of the dust chute round the blade (leaving the side that protects the belt), so it just lets sawdust fall down.
I liked mine (Rafezetter has it now), and I have a TS 200 which I'm refurbing as/when. I think the leg kit is too low as-is, but you might put it on castors, in which case the extra height would probably be good.
Have fun, and be very careful if its your first TS - they don't take prisoners, so safety first all the way. I like Steve Maskery's table saw videos (but then my Kity is in one of them!), and he consulted with the HSE when making them. DO NOT copy anything you see being done by an American in this context!
E.