[quote=hometheaterman;3526392]I want a nice good setup now.
I'd look at hornady because they have good quality and will give you free bullets that will offset the cost of the equipment. Otherwise, Lyman, RCBS, Dillon, Forster, all have good quality. The only one that is questionable is Lee. I get along fine with Lee, but I have broken a press linkage.
You also don't say what you mean be nice setup, one man's nice setup is another's junk. If you shoot a lot of pistol ammo, you might want a progressive, that will do hundreds of rounds per hour. I'd start with a single stage. Even if you do want a progressive, you will still use a single stage quite a bit. You would load 9mm on the progressive and .30-06 on the single stage. You can start loading everything on a single stage and do the dreaded upgrade if it is needed. It won't hurt you, because you'll always want a single stage.
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Originally Posted by hometheaterman
Also do I need different setups to do shotgun shells vs rifle shells? Also how hard is this to learn? Since I've never done it before is it going to be something that's hard to pick up or requires a ton of time?
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I haven't read the other replies thoroughly, so in case no one else answered, yes you need a completely different setup for shotgun shells.
I load steel shot, which is a lot more difficult, and slow. You definately want a single stage for that.
How hard to learn? Not very, if you get a good manual and follow directions.
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Originally Posted by hometheaterman
BTW I would be reloading for a semi auto. Not sure if that matters.
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Maybe. That depends on whether the semiauto is the rifle or the shotgun. With the shotgun, certain 'hot' recipes might cycle it too fast, causing unusual wear and tear. These are mostly going to be hot waterfowl loads. Some maufacturers void the waranty if you use reloads.
With a rifle, this is probably not a problem, unless you have a Garand, which has special recipes.