i’ve been using the lee for 30 years, [not the same one] if it tears up, another is cheap enough, and the shellholders are low dollar. gives a good feel for seating to me, course after many thousands of rounds, you’ll get the "feel "of anythihg.
Wow - Lee here as well - mainly .45 since my Lee 1000 press absolutely sucks as a progressive loader and has been demoted over the years. Biggest issue is the priming on that press sucks and can bring your process to a hault, hence I:
deprime first pass with the 1000.
hand prime.
use the 1000 for the second pass for powder/bullet seating.
Just be sure to keep the pot metal “hinge” greased up. I ran one dry and it wore out pretty quick. Of course Lee sent me another one and told me to lube it. I now have 2 and both have primed many, many cases without another issue, cheap or not it works well.
This is why I sold my progressive press and ordered a turret press. I have yet to find a progressive press that has a reliable primer system. I prefer to work more slowly and get 100% results.
I went through three Lees. The handle broke on all three even with lube. I recently converted to the RCBS Universal priming tool. I bought two and set one up for small primers and one for large. The spring loaded shell holder fits all so you don’t have to buy shell holders or change them out. I’ve only had them a couple of months but so far they are great.
I would recommend the K&M hand priming tool. It is a step above most others except possibly the expensive Sinclair model. The K&M unit uses the inexpensive Lee shellholders. I keep a pair of K&Ms on hand so one is always ready for .223 brass.
I had one of the RCBS hand primers for many years, but it finally broke.
I agree to a point. I wouldn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater though. The Dillon priming systems work when they’re clean and new, but yeah… After mashing many primers and seating them upside down… I run the priming system manually so I can watch the little bitch for every primer.
I’ve definitely gotten to where I’ll trade of speed and volume of ammo for quality too! It’s a maturing process… plus the price of components is conducive to this philosophy!
Agreed. I load more slowly now. I enjoy my time at the bench more. Less wasted components also. If I were to ever go back to a progressive I would de cap and hand prime first