Dont knock Draper as some in here do.
The Draper is pretty much the same model as the OP's Erbauer (certainly an almost identical front end) - and presumably has the same potential quality issues. I feel the problem with a lot of Chinese stuff is that there is simply no quality control to weed-out defective or inaccurate tools. Not really much of an issue for a DIY drill or impact driver where a bit of chuck wobble isn't normally be an issue, but in the cases of tools like biscuit jointers or dowel jointers which absolutely need to cut very accurate joints it really does make the difference between a tool being useable or in some cases complete junk.
I've never had a low cost biscuit jointer, having started my biscuit jointing in the period when the only choice was between an eye-wateringly expensive Swiss tool (the Lamello) and a just plain very expensive, but oddball Elu DS140 (they were patent dodging). At that time there were no alternatives. But I've never bought a cheap BJ, only heard from others of problems they have had with them.
I have, however, had a similar experience with a dowel jointer - another tool which must have a very accurate fence system (and which looks much like a BJ). I once made a "test buy" (for home use) of a Triton TBJ001 dowel jointer a number of years back to see if it could do the same job as the very expensive Mafell Duo Doweller DD40 dowel jointer. The first one I got couldn't drill two holes in line with each other, the second one had a fence which pivoted on the p*ss, the third one and we were back to the same problem as the first. At that point I was offered a refund and the excuse that "it must have been a bad batch". Others, such as Peter Millard (10 Minute Workshop on YouTube) have tried this same tool at different times and had the same sort of results, which tends to point to poor manufacturing or quality control, not just a rogue batch. The Mafell doweller is a £900/£1k machine, partly because it is made in Germany, partly because it is accurate. The Triton is £200/250 street price.
Similarly, a low cost biscuit jointer will be £80 to £120 whereas a "trade quality" model from a respected manufacturer will run you from £250 (today's Amazon price for a DW682, Makita PJ7000 very similar) up to £670 for a Lamello Classic (and a staggering £1450 for a Lamello Zeta, but they can cut a very special locking joint as well as slot for ordinary biscuits). With such enormous differences in price it isn't difficult to understand why some of these Chinese tools get a drubbing. So not to knock Draper, but there is always going to be a price point below which you can't make a product consistently to the required minimum level of accuracy, or durability, etc. That's what makes recommending Chinese tools so difficult
As a tradesman, if I could get away with buying cheaper DIY tools, then I would. Sadly, the days when DIY tools were as accurate or robust as the Black & Decker DIY electric drills were in the 1960s or 70s (where many tradesmen bought cheap and got 10 or 20 years service out of them) are now long gone. These days it's definitely a case of
caveat emptor (buyer beware!)