I'm sure you'll find someone local to help you get it all figured out.
FWIW I have one and I use it to make my long range ammo (.308Win at 300-1000 yards). Mostly I use it as a single (or maybe two-station) press with an automatic casefeeder. Typical things I'll do with the press:
- neck sizing and priming my fired brass. I'll then put the primed cases in a loading block and throw powder charges using a bench-mounted BR-30 measure.
- full length sizing my brass. When I need to do this, I'll put my lubed brass into the casefeeder. Usually I'll only have a Redding body die in one of the stations, plus a special part I had made that goes into the toolhead's central hole which is used to adjust and precisely control exactly how much the shoulder is pushed back (the headspacing dimension on a .308 Win). Note that this leaves the primer in place and leaves the neck in the "fired" state. Then I'll put them through a vibratory cleaner to degrease them. Then I can neck size and prime them.
- seating my bullets. With a loading tray full of powder-charged primed cases, I set a bullet on top and put it into station #4, which has a seater die (Redding micrometer adjustable). Bullet gets seated, auto-advances and kicks out into bin.
Having a case feeder makes it possible to do all these things quickly efficiently and without bother. I've never bothered timing/measuring my production rate but it is easily several hundred per hour, used in the manner I've described.
If you don't need to full length size (or if you have new or already-sized brass available), and you are willing/able to use a toolhead-mounted powder measure (e.g. you are using ball powder and you are loading 600 yard ammo), you can comfortably and sustainably produce 1000 rounds per hour; it's kinda rewarding to do that at least occasionally.