Well, that pretty much nails it.
+1 for the Dillon progressive for your pistol stuff.
Pick up 2 decent reloading books and read them cover to cover. 50% of each one is load data, so not literally cover to cover. If you buy the Lee one, take what he says with a grain of salt. Richard Lee probably does more reloading research in 2 months than most of us will do in a lifetime.....but he kind of stretches the truth a bit when it comes to "this is all you need so, this is all we designed into product X"
+1 for a single stage for your .270. Pick up the RCBS beginner kit that has the Rockchucker press in it. I believe it comes with a scale, powder funnel and some other bits and pieces that you'll need. You'll have that press for the next 25 or more years. They're really well made.
Then there's the odds and ends. A couple of reloading trays for holding your rifle rounds.
A powder measure if you're doing quite a few larger rifle rounds. It'll make your life a lot simpler. The RCBS one is accurate to within 1/10th of a grain and is around $100.
A bullet puller. The kenetic hammer type is fine unless you have to pull a ton of bullets. They're around $20........ If you're so inclined, there are bullet pulling dies you can buy, but you need a collet for each caliber. I think the die is around $25 and each collet is $13, but they're a lot easier on the hands than the hammer type and a lot faster doing "bulk pulls"
A tumbler for sure. The one I have is a Lyman Turbo 1200 and I love the thing. It's got literally hundreds of hours on it and it's still going strong. Around $120.
A media/shell separator is a great time saver as well. As mentioned before, you can get one of the one's you crank, or just a dish type that sits on top of your tumbler. I've got the latter. I just turn on the tumbler and run my fingers through the shell pile for about 30 seconds or so to separate the media. The dish type is about $12, and the rotary hand crank type I think is around $48
A hand held priming tool is good too. I have the RCBS one, but from what I've been told, the Lee one is ok. I think the RCBS one was around $50.
Ok guys....fill in the blanks.....what am I missing? I'll go have a look in the garage in my tool box.
EDIT: Case length gauge and trimmer. I use the Lee one that you put in a drill. The cutter head, spindle, spindle nut, and length gauge for one caliber is about $20. After that, the spindle nut and length gauges are I think around $4.59 for each caliber. You use the same spindle and cutter for all calibers. Also I've got a neck deburring tool. I think it was $4.