I operated a Sharp lathe for some time at work, a very good machine for the price. I find Taiwanese built machinery to be head and shoulders above Mainland China stuff in general.
Yeah, and the bigger you go, the better the mainland Chinese stuff gets too. And the closer to actual market rates the price gets, as good materials, and good bearings, are pretty expensive.
They build to what the customer orders. Too bad that the customer has been ordering sea containers of cheap crap for so many years. The plus side of that is that the abundance of cheap crap has driven the prices of some really good machines, down to where a hobbiest can afford to buy them.
I'll be clear, not dissing on the 14 x 40 lathes in any way, just that they are larger than most guys can fit in their space, and are also much more expensive to buy, feed and keep, as it were.
If a fella had to have just one lathe, and was using it professionally, it'd be a good choice as an all round user, but most gunsmiths would be over equipped with one, when the vast majority of the jobs are much smaller than the lathe can deal with.
I use a Myford Super 7 for most of my parts and project work. I also have a 11x24 Emco Super 11(Austrian made, not Enco Chinese), and a 13x40 Colchester Master 2500, that is in storage awaiting the installation of a VFD and motor so I don't need to run a step up transformer for the 550V original motors. Bothe the Emco and the Colchester share the same size spindle. The Emco is a pretty light weight lathe for the size of it's bore, while the Colchester is about average for a 13x40