I agree with awesom and hmfa-- the Schimmel is overpriced, and be sure to fall in love with the piano. It will be there with you for a long time.
I personally have a Schimmel 178, I love it. The tone is even throughout the register. Yes, it has a bit of a stiff action, but I don't mind. If you can play a trill well on the Schimmel, you can do it well anywhere else with ease. The Schimmels have, typically, a singing, bright treble register. This is not a problem for me, nor for the string players I rehearse with. They often find the Steinways we are given to perform on at halls to sound rather lame and dull in comparison.
Still, Kawais are fine pianos, and not dissimilar from the Schimmels in many ways. Keep looking, become an expert! Bigger pianos (more bass overtones) and newer pianos (rebuilding is expensive and problematic) are, for the most part, better. Sometimes a bigger grand that's 20 years old and in perfect shape will cost the same as a new, smaller one.
There's nothing more fun than trying out pianos, new and used, by the dozens. Like dating in college. Don't rush the process. Fall in love.