So do you see a decent-enough Maker turn out the equipment necessary for a small chip production facility? Not on the sort of scale that would see mass exporting or being able to support a whole planet's industry, but sufficient to get a colony to a minimal level of self-sufficiency and able to replace essential components as they wore out?
I know infojunky and I just had a discussion on real world semiconductor manufacturing, but I don't want to get too focused on "chips" as these are farfuture electronic devices and not just today's ICs.
Anyway, I would say a decent-enough Makers could certainly be used to build the manufacturing equipment necessary for TL7/8 semiconductor manufacturing. Putting together an end-to-end production facility is still going to be big undertaking, even for small-scale production. You need equipment, supplies and facilities for: pure raw materials, chemical handling, clean room environment, hazardous waste disposal, silicon (or other substrate) fabrication, wafer fabrication, package fabrication, IC assembly, IC test, PCB fabrication, PCB assembly, system test. A small colony isn't likely to try to do all this stuff. It is a lot of steps, a lot equipment, a lot of different expertise that have to come together. It is a lot of work for small returns if it is just for internal use if buying stuff is an alternative.
In any event, using the TL8 devices produced in such a factory as an input, you could then use your maker to build a TL9 end-to-end factory. Rinse and repeat on up to 1 TL below whatever your Maker is built at (my own Maker-limitation ruling idea.)
The point is, technology transfer has to be hard, otherwise it would be common. My way to make it hard is to make it expensive in terms of physical and human capital, and I wouldn't let Makers short-circuit that.
(Hat tip to Mike who has a different explanation for why tech transfer is hard in the face of Makers - Imperial jackboots don't let Makers get used for unauthorized builds. That is another approach I suppose, but I'm not sure I'm fond of that setting idea.)