Nothing is even close in price point to the Pro1000, but how many rounds do you expect to shoot per week?
The cheapest press may or may not fit your needs.
I've used several Pro1000's for over ten years in calibers 45ACP, 40 S&W, 38 Special & 45 GAP
If you are not mechanically inclined, frugal, persistant and stuborn the Pro1000 may not be the best choice for you.
As I generally fit the previous requirements I've happily reloaded with it for years, my 2 cents (pro & con) are;
-If you load your dies and extra powder measures in extra turrets & have different loaded carriages for the various cartridges you are loading for caliber swaps are very quick.
-The priming system only causes issues if it runs low on primers or spilt powder gets into the primer ram.
-Lee recommends never using Federal primers as they may explode (I've loaded thousands before I knew without a hitch).
-Wear a faceshield, if one primer ignites they all do and its pointed at your face (never happened to me but I know a guy with a Loadmaster who got a facefull).
-Get a case collator with it as they work great.
-The case feeder can be agrevating if you don't get the "lee rhythm".
-The aluminum linkage and handle are prone to breakage- you can get steel linkage and a roller arm that are much better.
-Spent primer management sucks- they wind up everywhere...
-Get an adjustable charge bar.
-The powder measure meters flake powder better than extruded (IMO).
-As its a three position press powder spillage can be a pain depending on caliber / powder combo.
-As its a three position press you cannot crimp seperately from seating and you cannot use a powder check die.
-With rhythm you can easilly load 200-250 per hour.
I have just ordered a Hornady LNL with a case feeder, with the accessories it was over triple the Lee1000 (with the options) and never came with the dies.
I ordered it for a variety of reasons, 5 stations being one, their power measure was another and the new caliber I'm loading for requires seperate seating / crimping.
Without the needs of my new cartridge I would have stayed exclusively with the Lee- happily too.
Many people are die hard blue supporters- the ones I've seen are all very nice but when completely outfitted are more than a LNL (from my limited research) so you really have a hard time comparing them to a Pro1000 solely on price. The people who have them love them.
I went LNL because I liked the powder measure, the die bushings and many people thought it was the smoothest (14G of N110 in a 9x40 is pretty full and has a tendancy to spill if jerked around- I'm hoping this will be minimized on the LNL).
I think you might want to focus on value and not just price as this is what you will be living with years after you spend your money.
Cheers