I patch my .303 when I watch tv in the evening, when I need them. a day or two later I lube them while watching tv. let those dry and I store them in the clamshell packs screws come in at the hardware store. I bell the casings with a tapered machinists punch and a leather mallet, and casings are neck sized only. the bullet slips in, then I give a "baby finger" crimp on my press. meaning I use my little finger to push down on the press handle to give a very gentle crimp. nothing complicated about it, and I don`t have to mess around with greasy waxy bullet lube and gas checks. I lightly anneal the necks every 2 loadings and my Winchester brass is on its 4th go round with only 2 split necks from 100 cases, and no indicators of case head separation.
I use an NOE mould, with lube grooves. the paper shrinks into the groves which seem to hold the paper on better. this paper will litter the ground in front of you if there is no wind, and will garner a lot of attention at the range because you will be the only one that many of the other members have seen that paper jacket the bullet.
I always write on each case the powder type, and grains in that casing. I don`t size, as my bore is over size. it was frosted when I bought it, stayed black through all the factory ammo, then got shiny after 200 or so paper jacket bullets. only lead I get is when I feed too fast from the mag. the lips carve a tiny sliver of lead out that seems to end up in the chamber and stays there till cleaning.
I knew an old guy who had a Sharp`s .50 and he paper wraped his bullets for that.