Well to the above points I can only say:
1. On my Rexon, the table is "only" 30 x 25 cm (I've just been out to the shop to measure it) but together with the cast iron "arm" it's mounted on (which allows the table to be rotated around its centre point (useful), AND to be tilted either side of horizontal by about 45 degrees each way (not so useful), the whole caboosh weighs a bloody "ton", so I definitely would NOT be without rack & pinion height adjust!;
2. The rack (which is about 40 cm long) is NOT fixed to the central column itself. Instead it sits inside two collars each of which has a "dovetail slot" machined into it. One is mounted on the column right near the bottom, one up near the head. When you unlock the table to adjust the height (which is done with just one hand BTW) this leaves the whole table and rack and pinion assembly held at whatever height was previously set but also free to rotate around the central column to any position you like;
3. Agreed that shifting the belts to change speeds is not such a MAJOR problem, but as said in my last, it IS a bit of a *** - to the extent that on some jobs, rather than change speeds I say to myself "that speed'll be about OK". (I tend to leave it around set at around the middle range of the range of 12 rpm's available). OK, agreed, I'm a "lazy barsteward" but I stick with what I said before - I wish I had had (or have) the budget to go for a gearbox/ electronic control model.
Otherwise my Rexon suits me down to the ground for what I's probably best described as your average hobbyist/jobbing shop.
BTW, my Rexon (model DP 330-A if you want to look it up) cost about one tenth (new) of the over one thousand+ quid that the West Country Machines model linked to costs. BUT I did then spend the equivalent of about another forty quid on a new, close tolerance Rohm chuck (3 to 16 mm). I use a separate "small" chuck for small jobs from 0 to about 4 mm.
No idea where my Rexon came from originally (China I guess, but I bought it here - Switzerland - over 10 years ago). It's specced at 20 mm max capacity (but it's done a LOT bigger holes than that - carefully!) and is B16/MT2, which makes it compatible with a wide range of easily available chucks, etc, etc.
All I'm trying to say that a couple of the points raised above about table adjust/rack & pinion are not necessarily 100% correct (I don't doubt the poster's points, BUT you need to look closely at the exact machine under consideration to be sure of the details).
AND IMO today there's no way that I'd spend over a thousand quid on a single pillar drill unless - perhaps - I was equipping a professional workshop. Just not necessary for the hobbyist (again IMO). Remember that everything that comes from China is not necessarily "carp", a lot depends on which factory and on whether or not the factory is making on behalf of a "known" label, and on whether or not the label owner has his own QC people overseeing the job. OK, I'm 75, but my Rexon will easily outlast me (and my son, if I had one).
Oh. I forgot! P.S. The depth setting on my Rexon is not exactly "brilliant" but with care it does work, and once correctly set it's easy to repeat drilling loads of holes of the same depth one after the other.
Again HTH