I guess I fall into the second category that Freedom Ventures mentioned,
Someone with a Lee Progressive that loves it; has never tried anything else.
I have a Lee Pro and love it, so I ended up with 4 more of them and love all of them LOL. My goal was to have 1 set up for each caliber, so 1 for 9mm, 1 for .357, 1 for .45acp, 1 for 44 magnum and one for .223. The press for my .223 is used sort of like a single stage for the first part, de-priming and sizing, then I trim the cases and swap out the head and do the charge, and bullet seating, and then I run them though a 3rd time with a crimp die. I have done a bunch of test loads but have not tried them out yet.
Do the Lee Pro 1000 presses sometimes need to be tweeked or caressed and told they are sweet and ###y, sure, sometimes, but get one and get used to her and you will know how to treat the next one. As for the time spent tweeking it, I learned a LOT when I first got started so I dont hold a grudge.
Nowadays, I can easily crank out 500 rounds an hour of pistol rounds with NO SETUP or changeovers since each press always has powder and primers in it and is ready to rock within 2 minutes. The 2 minutes is just me taking it off my press shelf and putting it on the steel welding bench.
I will say I have never used the other brands that cost a LOT more money, but thats because I have a wife and I had to "ease" into setting up for reloading, once I got setup with the first Pro1000, I saw no reason to shell out a LOT of money on a "better" system when I already had this less expensive setup all figured out.
The shelf....
The bench....
