Regarding the 10-year life I'm hoping to expect, that wasn't pulled out of the air. I have already used JBC tips for about 10 years (regular use, but not production volume use). I only use decent brand solder/flux for constructing prototypes, but the tips have also experienced desoldering of typical made-in-China boards, e.g., consumer products, plus the occasional AliExpress-bought board, i.e., a complete mix.
My tip-cleaning regime is simple; just steel wool. I don't feel I'm being super careful. At some point in ten years, I've also absent-mindedly pressed hard sideways because one of my most-used tips has a very slight bend, but I still use it.
Since the tips will last so long (I can't comment on production use as mentioned before), to me it's a no-brainer, if the cost difference isn't that much, to go with the more mature option.
I totally get that the large coin test is not representative of typical real-life use, but the result can scale downward. My 'general-purpose' tip is 1mm sized, and I use that for SOIC, SOT-23, 0603, 0805, and most through-hole parts (e.g. several-amp rectifiers, and some connectors), because I expect the soldering station to just pump out a lot of heat rapidly when I move to the larger components, even if that's not the optimal tip. Only when I get to much larger connectors, will I want to switch out to a bigger tip, or when doing finer SMD, or when doing drag soldering, use different tips.
I get my soldering station tomorrow, I won't be doing a coin test experiment, I will just try a few connectors etc to be sure it's working as I hope. I won't write it up here since it's not ADS200-related, and there are probably plenty of reviews of JBC stations elsewhere. I just wanted to mention that right now (not with the plus version), I struggled to justify to myself that the relatively small cost saving was worth it, in comparison to other systems which lets face it, are known to be more mature (performance under high thermal demand and greater tip selection). I just can't see a reason to take the risk for the small cost saving (of course, in different regions, the cost difference may be more significant, but a couple of hundred $ spread out over a decade or so of anticipated use, seems in the noise).