What would you consider industrial quality differ from hobby quality?
I guess it really depends on the application and intended use.
I'm not an expert, but I do have a few years of machine shop experience. I see the biggest difference between industrial machinery and hobby type machinery being the mass and rigidity of the machine. Mass and rigidity help everything from the cutting capacity of the machine to the vibration of the machine and cut quality even on very low cutting loads. Heavy steel and cast iron vs aluminum.
Another difference is in the design. An industrial machine will probably have most or all of its design bugs worked out through the years. A hobby type machine the builder might have only made 5 machines in his life. He might not have the customer base to know what needs improvement, etc.
On a cnc of this class, I can see possible issues with for example the bearings that hold the lead screw. Are they properly designed to eliminate backlash, and still account for thermal expansion? How was the bearing journal on the end of the leadscrew machined? Does the entire system flex when the axes are moved? If so, how much, etc. Are the servos/steppers attached with a coupling system that allows for some misalignment? Little details like these add up. I bought a cnc saw machine of a hobby class from here, and boy, what a piece of sh!t that was!
I'm not putting down your machine, please don't take this that way. In fact, it looks really well done from the pictures I've seen on your site. And I like the forum setup you have, so people can check things out and you can update info there.
In the end, this is a 2K to 3K USD machine depending on the options it looks like. Something has to be different than a machine that might cost 25K USD.