Best of both worlds
When I got into reloading a few years ago, I asked around the club and got a 50-50 answer between the dillons and the Lee. Being on a budget I opted for the Lee.
I found the progressive part to be a pain at times so I took the twisted stick out of the center that turns the dies and do it by hand.
The way I do it sounds similar to what you do. I deprime/resize 100,200, 400 what ever I want on the press. Take my tupperware upstairs and hand prime (lee auto prime) in front of the tv. take the brass back down stairs, if its pistol I have a powder measure set up for every caliber with the dies locked in place on their own tool heads. (Once set no changing them) then put em through the press, fill, seat, crimp, fill , seat, crimp and so on.
For rifles I place primed cases in wooden tray open ends up and have a RCBS powder dispenser (manual) for basic plinking loads and put em in one after another (very quick) . For accuracy loads I use an electronic scale and I'm specific about them all being exactly the same but that's time consuming.
Each piece was bought on a budget and didn't cost me alot. The only expensive piece was the electronic scale/dispenser and I think it was worth the investment for the accuracy I was looking for.
M.
p.s. I've tried priming on the Lee Press , it sucks,,, bought the Hand primer and I love it.