I love this grinder. It grinds consistently, quickly, and almost effortlessly with its huge (for a hand grinder), titanium coated burrs. I think a comparable known brand high end grinder would cost you two to three times as much.Fit and finish are excellent, with a few exceptions. No visible blemishes or rough or sharp edges on the main unit, which is beautiful - precisely engineered with matte black paint and a shiny stainless steel ring (like it was made to match my Fellow kettle). Unscrewing the bottom housing revealed a speck of missing paint/anodization where the housing pieces connect when screwed together (out of sight out of mind as far as I'm concerned). The wood knob on the handle needed some fine sandpapering and an oiling. The handle has little indentations, I'm assuming from where it was held when the 6mm hex rod was bent into shape (this is sort of odd - none of my multitude of free hex wrenches have marks like this).The grinds collection cup screws into the main unit, which is not clear from the photos. It's fairly standard for hand grinders and I think a better solution than a cup held by friction (some reviews complained about that in the JM38 model). The threads are painted/anodized and look robust. The unit itself is quite heavy, so while your arms shouldn't get tired turning the handle, they might start to feel the weight of the grinder. Junoesque (more on the weird brand name later) has thoughtfully provided a grippy silicone sleeve which I first used at the bottom to attempt to grind with the unit held down to the counter, but I think is better placed near the top to reduce forearm strain from squeezing the grinder to hold it and keep it from rotating. It comes with a very nice brush that wouldn't be out of place in a makeup kit.Then there's a bit of quirkiness in the translations and branding. Junoesque is just about the only brand I can think of that's an adjective. It's just weird, and has nothing to do with coffee - and the cup as a "J" and bean as an "o" don't help matters, especially with the font chosen for the rest of the letters (my wife thought the brand was "UN ESQUE"). The instructions are almost adequate, but are insufficient for disassembly - they really need to be rewritten and retranslated. It comes with a faux-burlap bag with the Junoesque logo and their motto "Make Easier Close to Original Coffee". Cute, but no. I think that should have been "Perfect Coffee, Made Easy". And I'm not sure what that faux-burlap bag is for - it's too large for the grinder alone, but if you put the handle in with the grinder you'd scratch the paint/anodization. If I were in charge of this product I'd either give the bag a separate pouch for the handle (and make it out of a better material), or lose the bag and make the box high end with formed cardboard compartments for the grinder, handle, and drill bit. It could also use an additional silicone cup for the bottom.