There is a perception that Lee is low quality because of low price. That is not true at all. I do shoot for accuracy and have the resources to buy anything to make that happen. I have found over the years, the Lee products do the same job for up to 1/3 the cost. Are there certain products made by other companies that I prefer, of course.
For a trimmer, neck turner, I like the Forster set up.
For a beam scale, believe it or not, the Lee scale works the best and I have compared several others.
For a press, the challenger has the well documented problem and I have broken my fair share. For the low volume user, it will last several lifetimes. I am hard on my gear cause I use it a lot. The new Lee cast press will be on my loading bench soon. Is the Challenger press capable of loading match grade ammo? Only is you are.
For a hand primer, the Lee product IS the standard.
For neck sizing dies, the best thing to happen to shooting at all levels is the Lee Collet die. This little device has unlocked the accuracy potential of every rifle that is being reloaded for. Measure the runout of a fired case, size and remeasure. Compare that runout, or lack of, to ANY DIE on the market custom or otherwise at any price.
When after sizing runout is basically zero, you can't get better then that. Also, now that many are learning that heavy neck tension is a great aid for lowering ES, the use of bushings really is irrelevant. You need 3 to 4 thou of neck tension. That comes standard with every collet die.
For a FL die, there really isn't any bad ones nor great ones. The 'chamber' sizing of the die really doesn't matter. Each companies decides where in the range of SAAMI tolerance they want to be and builds dies accordingly. Also, as the tooling wears, die dimensions change anyways. I use this as an advantage.
I have picked up sizing dies from a variety of companies to see which sized the brass for the best fit. Did that with my 9mm and got great results. One gun needed more, another less. By playing with the dies, I got custom ammo that shot very well. You just kept the ammo separated.
Downside is the expander ball. If that rod is not aligned, the necks can be pulled out of true. That is really what cause all that runout, and why I avoid using these type of dies as much as possible. If they can solve this issue, FL sizing will be something I will return doing for certain applications.
For a seating die, most work just fine. This is rarely the place that runout is created. That happens most often in the sizing stage. I have had success with the Forster seaters too. However, the lee worked just as well.
Why do people complain about Lee? About anything? Maybe its their use of plastics. Maybe it's because the industry has received some critisms from Mr. Lee himself. Who knows? Who cares?
I have never heard someone complain because the gear didn't work which I feel is the whole point. I have heard complaints about polish levels (exterior levels not interior which is equal to any on the market), on labeling, on bling. Lee has none of the bling and marketing that others companies use to justify their elevated pricing.
I want performance and my results speak for themselves. If someone can do it for less money, that is a bonus. Could be another reason I shoot Hornady bullets and use Bushnell and Nikon optics.
I simply don't feel the need to spend extra money to get equal or less performance.
Jerry
PS for those having trouble with the Lee molds getting stiff, not closing, etc. the molds need to be lubed. use the solid Alox Beeswax stick and just touch it to the hinge points. The molds must be well lubed to work properly. I had all the same problems until I read the instructions (I really did) and found that the lube was needed. All problems now solved.
Just use a very small amount. If too much, a bit of a pain as it will affect the bullets. Bizarre that the stuff works but it does.