A lot of people are suggesting a small cheap single stage press with no sharing. Keeps it budget sensitive and no hassles. I guess an option would be to pump out as much as I could in stages. A few days depriming, and move down the line when possible. I don't shoot a lot currently, the goal though is to increase those numbers by reloading to keep it budget friendly.
I need time and budget friendly, things that usually do not go together, so that is the solution I need to find. From the consensus here, I am leaning towards a cheaper single stage, and do what I can with the time I have to spare! If I could get a few hundred made up each month, that would at least make it worthwhile!
Bingo!
Deprime/resize is a no brainer step that can be interrupted at any time, and you will always pretty much know where you are. I use two steel bowls, pull a case out of one, run my greasy (Hornady Case Lube, IIRC, had it so long I don't really recall when I lost the lid...) fingers over it while I look for splits, then through the die.
Inspecting cases gets done as you are lubing and processing through this step. Good time to measure the cases for max length. If you want. I happen to like the Lee case trimmer, and use them with the cutter and mandrel in my lathe, but a drill press or other motorized rig makes it really fast to just run the whole batch through and see if the cases lose any trimmings. Same power tool gets used to run the deburring tool first inside, then outside. And the primer pocket cleaner. Really fast, and you can run hundreds of cases in an hours time. Repetitive hand motion, it goes really fast.
I use a Lee hand primer to prime. Because that's what I have, and it works.
A set of dippers, a powder funnel, and a scale, for measuring out your powder. Powder measuring and assembling the bullet to case, are the two step I would not interrupt. Dip a couple dozen loads onto the scale, to check your consistency. Then go to town on your cases in a loading block. I am too cheap to buy a dedicated loading block, so I use my MTM CaseGard ammo boxes. Messy when you put that double charge in ( It happens!) but whatever. Easy to look into all the case mouths, and compare the height of the charges, a double, if you are using a powder that will actually FIT a double charge, will stand out like a sore thumb.
If you do not want to use dippers, look at a Lyman 55 or similar powder measure. Quick, and pretty consistent. I like my dippers though. I don't try to wring the nuts out of my loads, either. I loaded with just dippers, for a couple(OK, nearly 20) years. I ate a lot of venison, and shot a LOT of gophers. They work.
Seating/crimping. The fiddly bit is setting the dies up. Once that is done, esp if you have your own dies and are not changing from one bullet to another often, they are pretty much just a matter of checking the first couple off the press, then, it's pretty rapid progress, pick up a charged case and put it in the shell holder, place a bullet on top of it, feed it into the die, go full stroke, rinse, and repeat.
My last reloading session was a bit over 500 rounds of .223 ammo, spread over a couple evenings. Maybe 3 1/2 hours total. Much of that time was me doddling around rather than really working at getting progress made.
Before I bought the Lee Classic Cast, I could pretty much fit my entire reloading kit into a lunchbox. And still have some room for consumables.
Cheers
Trev