Back in my childhood I used to lube bullets by melting the lube in a pan and putting the bullets in it and cutting the bullets out of the hardened lube with a cake cutter. Right away I had to do as the big boys did it with a lubrisizer, and have hardly touched a cake cutter since.
Lately I have been loading for a 32 long. I am using a Lee bullet that barely makes the bore diameter that I need, so I don't really want to run it through the lubrisizer. I have used lots of Lee's liquid alox in the past, and it is great for lubing bullets fast, but it coats the whole bullet, which is alright if you load them up and go to the range and shoot them. With my 32, the bullets might be in the truck or in my carry bag or even in a pocket, so having grease on the exposed noses is not an option.
So it's back to my childhood. I made a cake cutter by cutting the base off a 7.62x39 case. A 303 Brit would probably be nicer, but they are in short supply right now. My pan is a can cut off short. It only holds about 20 bullets but I work my process in with other activities, like posting on Greybeard. I melt with some sort of perfume heater I stole from the wife. I barely gets hotter than a light bulb so there is no worry about starting a fire if I forget my cooking. I'm using a commercial alox for lube. Rather than melt the lube and place the bullets, I put the bullets in the holes that I cut the previous batch from, and then melt.
What I'm finding is that discounting the time I spend melting and cooling when I do other things anyhow, this process is probably just as fast as a lubrisizer, and I'm not tied to the loading bench, I can do it in the kitchen. Sometimes I'm pretty sure low tech if better.