Acceptability is based on what you are willing to live with. If it bugs ya, fix it.
That's why they make several sizes of linear rails and shapes. All have a tolerance of their own. Most projects are based on a dream and how much money you can throw at it. A crowbar would develop much more load then most cutters would produce. But if each joint/axis gives ya .002" by just forcing it a little by the time ya get to the cutter tip it might be .006 or more. There is always a sweet spot on a machine & setup. Plus the direction of cut can seen to be better in one axis direction as to others. Learn to program with this in mind. Draw/CAD and write gcode/or CAM to optimize or take in account for what you know are issues you have learned from past projects.
If he was cutting wax it might be a perfect part. I can bet that cutting steel or aluminum it would bark like a wet dog.
As far as my machines (have three mills I built at present, have plans for one more) Each have issues of their own. So depending on the part design, depends on what machine it will go on.
Plus that's what sandpaper is good at, smoothing up little issues.
