I've had my LnL for about 4 years. It has proven its worth, to me. I only use it for handgun rounds, since I'd rather be anal and precise about powder charging, seating depth and crimping on my rifle rounds - and I don't feel confidence in getting that on the Hornady. If I was reloading for high-volume ammunition such as .223/5.56 I would most likely use the LnL but that isn't in the playbook right now.
Pros:
- very consistent powder charge on my 9mm, .357Mag and .38Spl
- I use a Powder Cop to do a visual on powder charging, and feel confident in that system for the smaller handgun rounds
- Getting into "the zone" when reloading is very pleasureable, and a great way to pass a winter evening
- I decap/deprime pretty much everything before S/S pin wet tumbling to clean the brass, so I did buy shell plates for all my rifle calibers, and with an RCBS depriming die, I can just feed the fired empties into the loading station (having removed or deactivated the dies that I use for loading handgun) and remove the fired primers as fast as my left hand can insert the fired brass into the shell plate while pulling the handle. Turns a chore into a breeze.
Cons:
- As one poster mentioned, it is very finicky to dial it in. Once you've got all the dies set up properly, though, and the primer feed bar spring and roller set/snugged down for a proper throw, it seems to be consistent (I haven't adjusted mine in over 2,000 rounds at least (lost count, frankly), even when changing calibers/dies/shellplate)
- The dies do seem to loosen up a tad, because of the oring friction/resistance system Hornady uses on the bushings. I've been meaning to go out to Princess Auto and picking up an O-Ring assortment set, to change over to a thicker ring. The worst station, for me, is the powder drop, which needs to be watched and checked for proper bottoming/bushing retention - not a big deal it only takes about 5 seconds to check about every 350 to 500 rounds or so, about a couple of hours of reloading activity.
- I would wish for a 6th station, given my druthers, because I've started using an FCD on my 9mm reloads, my 1911 is picky about the exact specs on the casings. The Lee FCD (carbide version) also resizes the brass and does a nice light compression on the bullet, but I'm forced to remove the Powder Cop OR stick the FCD into my Rockchucker for that extra step. Given the consistency of the powder drop, removing the Powder Cop doesn't bother me much, but it would be nice to have both the FCD and the PC.
- The Hornady primer tubes that come with the press new in the box are crappy. I bought a couple of SPP tubes for Dillon, and they work so much nicer than the Hornady ones - which seem like the inner diameter is 'way too generously sized, leading to the odd flipped primer coming through the feeder.
I'd buy another if I was in a situation where a new Progressive was necessary.
O.N.G.