Mako started out as a private label/brand for Tilton Equipment. We saw a fair amount of them and it's just like Dave says, they used several different sources and you never knew what you were getting until you opened the box. Their 52mm 372 kits were pretty good. Other kits were junk. Whoever bought up the Tilton inventory is spreading them out now. Rotary has bought some of them, so beware if ordering any kits from them. They sent me a 48mm sample and it was the lame Huztl open port jug. They just took the Mako box and stuck another label on it.
If performance is the goal, I agree with Doc that there's an awful lot of work involved to get to where you want to be with most of this AM stuff. If it's just a matter of turning a dead saw into a live saw for little cost, then they are fine.