I've been averaging 800 rounds per month for 3 years so far with my Lee turret press. Mostly .44mag and 9mm but other calibres as well. I'm up to 8 turrets now, 1 dedicated for prep and the other 7 loaded with die sets all pre-set the way I want them. 5 of them have risers for the Lee autodisc powder measure. With this set up, I can switch from loading one calibre to another in less than 5 minutes including verifying COAL and charge weight. Progressives may be faster but nowhere near as versatile. Their perfect powder measure works just peachy after a short break in period when the internals get a fine coating of graphite making the loading of bigger rifle rounds much faster than measuring and trickling every single round.
Call their stuff cheap and nasty but they have some well thought out designs that perform.
That sounds familiar! I have 7 turrets all set up the same way you do as well, .357, .44, 45-70, 30-30, 223, 308 and 300WM. I used to have 9mm, .40S&W, .45ACP and .45LC but I have given up on handguns for the most part so the dies have been sold and the turrets are re-used as listed above. Lee stuff works for me. Many tens of thousands of rounds of handgun ammo over the past 20 years, and by now, ten thousand plus rounds of bottleneck rifle ammo as well. Only within the last couple of years have I changed some of my precision reloading to a Redding T7 press, but there is still a Lee collet neck sizing die in each of the four Redding turrets I have. Not sure why anyone would disparage Lee dies. They always worked for me. Never had a problem. For the most part, the only problem I have had is with the priming tool and the little square nylon/plastic turret drive. Pretty inexpensive parts to fix it up like new.


















































