You could get a Lee anniversary kit for $70, a set of dies, and a good manual and be loading bullets in a day (you will want to read the manual carefully at least once). You could also buy a Dillon 650, a set of dies, and a good manual for $1000, and be loading in a day. The Lee kit will enable you to make great ammo. I started with a Lee basic kit 10 years ago and still use the same press. I have bought a few toys along the way to make loading a bit faster and more accurate like a Powder measure, case trimmer, Lee Autoprime, etc, but I think the anniversary kit has that stuff. I bought mine thinking I would upgrade if I started doing a lot of reloading. I still use the same press. I load thousands and thousands of .223, a bunch of 6mm TCU, a bunch of .45 LC, some .357, some .38, some 7mm Rem Mag, some .270. My press has probably been used for over 25,000 rounds. Some folks will tell yyou "Ya get what ya' pay for" and to only buy Dillon, some will say only RCBS, reloaders' superstitions and brand loyalty is even more than non-reloading shooters. Lee stuff works fine and will make perfectly good ammo. The finish gets better on other brands as prices go up. I bought my reloading gear to save $$$ and get better ammo. I would rather put the few-to-several hundred dollars difference into reloading components or a new rifle. If I were a serious benchrester or rapid fire shooter I would have a different set-up, but for me the Lee has worked fine.