I have 2 Lee 1000's, they run good and for the price you cant beat them. Biggest worry is that there is no powder check, if you shoot autoloader not a big deal but if you shoot wheel gun you have a problem if you are shooting fast. I had a primer in a new bottle of powder that was dumped into the powder hopper and inadvertently would give me squib loads, took me a while to figure that one out. It would run great and then all of a sudden squib loads. Scared the hell out of me, I am very meticulous when it comes to reloading and how on earth a primer was in a new bottle of powder I will never know. The priming system has its problems and I finally decided to use the machines differently since the near tragedy 3 years ago.
1. I install only the deprimer/sizing die in station 1, leave the other two stations empty and run thru all my brass just priming/sizing them and nothing else. The machine just cooks when all you are doing is priming. I bought an extra primer try for the son to keep full and his job is to fill the tubes. No spilled powder in the shell plate from a missed primer.
2. I bought the older style powder measure with the big spring on the side and installed it into station 1 with the flare die. Station 2 I leave blank and I have set up a mirror and light system so that when a charged case is up in the second stag I can clearly see the powder in the case.
3 Station 3 is as normal seat/crimp.
I would like to buy a Hornady L-N-L or a Dillon 650 because you can have a powder check die system and a factory crimp die also but the price of reloading components now and the amount that I would have to spend on all the conversion kits for the various calibers that I reload for it would take me about 9 years to pay off the difference just to break even with the amount of shooting I do now. Hard to justify, if one comes along that is cheap then I might go for it but not in any hurry.