I was looking around, can you reccomend a good thread/website/book explaining reloading
EDIT- Ok so I found some resources but now that I'm reading up on it, it seems like it would take quite a bit of time to make a bullet, how fast can an experienced reloader reload? a round maaaaybe 2 a minute?
Sure, check gunnutz very own reloading forum. Good info there.
Ultimate casting boolits forum is:
http://castboolits.gunloads.com
Watch plenty of youtube videos on reloading presses (aka Dillion 650, Lee, RCBS.)
Read, re-read and do more reading and watch a bunch of videos before starting. Then you'll get an idea what's going on. You can buy a cheap press or $$$ press. I think they're all pretty good and will all do the same job (make reliable ammo). Only difference I see is if you want to save time, progressive press is only way to go, especially for semi-auto pistols. I was completely clueless when I started a few months ago. But I'm casting my own bullets and loaded a whole bunch already (over ~1500rds) and fired more today with zero problems.

I just don't like firing cast bullets indoors, unless the ventilation is top notch. I'm looking for outdoor range now.
Buy a few reloading manuals such as Lyman but I didn't find it too useful b/c I only used a few pages of it for reloading 9mm and their data don't have my bullets, so I just used the manual as rough estimate and what recipes I found on the net with a grain of salt. Lyman does have a section on reloading, but I read so much from the internet, I found their guide useless to me.
Only word of advice is work your loads up (3-10 test rounds per load - or you'll end up just pulling hundreds of bullets like I did). Start off small and go 0.1 grain at a time until your gun cycles 100%. Once you hit that sweet spot, you may like it or may want to go higher. Entirely up to you if it's safe to do so. Overall Length (OAL) is very important too. Seat bullet too deep, huge risk of high pressures, poor feeding and poor accuracy. Seat bullet too shallow, poor feeding and poor accuracy. Well, there's crimping to worry about too, not to mention primers. LOL... But I'll stop now.