Just a question, don’t mean to offend anyone.
It appears that,most of the Lee supporters have many,many years experience.
So I was wondering,do they like the Lee stuff,because that’s all they’ve ever known or used?
Or what am I missing?
I see occasional threads pop up ,with Lee press issues,etc.
I use Lee stuff and other companies stuff. Most of the Lee stuff is just as good but less expensive. As I said, for pistol dies, you can't get anything as good for 2X the money. I have tried lyman, hornady and RCBS, and they're not any better, but you don't get a similar kit for the same price. The Lee 4 dies kit comes with a shellholder and a factory crimp that others kit don't come with. I have a set of Hornady dies for 50AE because Lee doesn't make carbide dies for 50AE, but I would dump the hornady in a hearthbeat if Lee produced carbide dies for that calibre.
Their single stage press are just as good as the other brands. I'm not sure what the "press issues" are, I've never had any problem with mine. A couple pieces were missing when I got it (bought used for super cheap) so I got them for free from Lee's website, no fuss. Their Beam scale is arguably crap, but I've never had one so I don't know. Their hand primer seem a bit crappy and require different shellholders, so I have a lyman that works 100% and would buy another one even if this one broke right now.
Their progressive press might not be as good as the dillon or hornady, but they're half the price and still work pretty well if you don't mind making minor adjustments from time to time. I make 500 rounds per hour on a loadmaster that cost me about 300$. The Pro1000 seem really crappy, I wouldn't pay much for one.
At the end of the day, if it works, it works. And you can always get something better for more money. I believe most people who use Lee equipment just started with the low budget hardware to see if reloading is for them, and since it works, they just keep going with it. Most reloaders do it to save money, and if you have to buy equipment that's too pricey, it doesn't make sense.