Good - but PRACTICE first before working on the item in question.
I admit, I didn't do well with this BUT I have rated it highly as the failure was my own lack of skill - not because there was a problem with the quality.
I would strongly suggest that you buy enough rods to have enough left over to have a good practice with whatever scrap that you are going to be brazing with.
So, if you want to braze and repair a hold in (for example) steel pipe, get some scrap steel pipe and get used to the heat levels, cleanliness required and how to do the job without making more of a problem than you wanted to solve.
As with most things, practice is valuable - but I DO believe that with properly prepared metal and a modicum of skill (get your practice in first), then a sound repair is perfectly attainable!
If you only need to print the odd page per week (an occasional latter) then this printer might be a good choice. If you will print more than two or three pages per week then you need to budget to soon be buying a toner cartridge that costs as much or slightly more than the printer did itself.
The toner cartridge supplied is good for 700 pages (IF you switch on economy print mode AND only cover about 5% of the page with toner.
In the real world, you will probably get about 200 pages before you need to spend another from £37 to £65 for a new cartridge. This however is good for 2600 pages as claimed (and again in reality perhaps a little less than 1000 pages in normal mode and if you print full pages of text or any graphics).
So cheap if you only print TINY amounts - or do not mind paying upto twice as much for a new cartridge as you paid for the printer in the first place.
If you are going to use this in an office - AVOID - it will cost you an absolute fortune to run.