I bought my no-name (same as HF) 10 ton hydraulic crimper for $15 (shipped) on eBay in 2017 (I just pulled up the invoice). I've done about 30 crimps on wires from 6AWG through 2/0, and it hasn't started leaking yet. The dies have a chrome finish that's ugly as sin, but that same chrome would show up even the slightest deformation, and they're clearly unblemished.
As for the incorrect comments about die sizes, charts that match metric to AWG cross sectional areas are easy to find.
+100 to FTZ Powerlugs! These have a wider contact area so you can double crimp them, have a closed front end so they're weather-tight, have the best plating I've seen, and are beefier than anything else out there. I cannot find anything better (and I've looked quite a bit).
I bought the 16 ton hydraulic crimper for $32 in 2019, because I had the need to have 4/0 capacity on-hand. But the 16 ton is just more unwieldy to use, so I hardly use it. If you're sure you won't need more than 2/0, stick with the 10 ton that has the C jaw instead of the 16 ton that has the cross pin.
Skip the grease or no-alox and use marine grade double wall heat shrink. Any grease will interfere with the adhesive shrink liner's bond to the insulation, so if you do grease don't waste you money on the better heat shrink. And (I'm sure you know this, but just for others reading), NEVER apply ANYTHING to the strands before crimping. The crimp MUST start out DRY.
Also, don't try to finish a hex (or square) crimp in a single crush. Hex dies will pinch off ears on each side, giving you something that looks like lugnut71's post above mine (his aren't that bad, but a hydraulic die can crush that down to foil). The right way to hex (or square) crimp is to close the jaws until the fitting has spread to the point it is about to be (but isn't yet) pinched. Then release and rotate the hex jaws one face and finish. You'll get a perfect hexagon with no crushed ears sticking out. Those ears are a weakness in the crimp, and will cut into your heat shrink. More modern crimping systems use oval crimps to compress in a single step, but they're more sensitive to die sizes.