My press is a 1957 Herter's Super Model 3. Figured I'd upgrade when Dad got through with it. Didn't happen. I got over wanting to load quantity and really appreciate loading one at a time when I'm working up a load and experimenting. That old press is similar to the RockChucker. I did swap the Herter Powder Scale for a Hornady Magnetic Dampened Model (bought one for Dad, also), and the Herter Powder Thrower got upgraded to an RCBS Model (Dad got one of them, also). Some of my die sets say Herter, some say RCBS, some say Redding, one says C-H, and one says Pacific. I had a Lyman set for 45Colt that I sold when I sold the 45Colt, some years back. I have several Lee factory crimp dies, and they are all splendid. I also have a Lee melting pot and a couple of Lee molds, though most of my molds say Lyman or RCBS. I've had an NEI/SSK mold and hope to have some LBT molds before I'm done. I don't think it hurts to have stuff from various companies. The worse set of dies I've had said Redding on them. They were rough. I sent them back for "fixing" and they tried polishing the sizing die and ended up sending me a new one. I also replaced my 8mm sizing die as the neck portion was oversized - it had the Herter name on it. No company is perfect and they all 'make a bad one' now and then. Guess it goes with manufacturing.
A friend of mine bought a Rockchucker "kit" with several pounds of powder, 3 sets of loading dies, a tumbler, several hundred brass cases, several hundred bullets, a brick of primers - just a ton of stuff - for less than the new price for the "kit". It was nearly new a real bargain.
Suggest you be patient and do some shopping. This kind of quality stuff really holds up and at today's prices for everything, there are bargains to be had.
Regards,
Sweetwater