OMG did you say Lee??? Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!! It has to be Blue!!!!!!!!! Red works fine. NO BLUE it has to be Blue!!!!! Red! Blue! Red! Blue!.....
Now that I've saved every one from having to chime in with the whole red, blue argument...
I got a pro 1000 at a yard sale for $20 with a set of dies in it. After a bit of tinkering, I liked it so much I got rid of my Lyman turret and got a Lee 3 hole turret so my turrets would interchange. (Warning the dies have to be reset to use in the turret or progressive). I also had a Dillon 550 but I got rid of it because it was unreasonably expensive to set it up for different calibers. It also took a bit of tinkering to get it going.
So, in my experience here goes
Lee auto turret
Pro's
Cheap, caliber change parts, pieces etc, faster than single stage, classic turret (cast iron base) is fairly bullet proof. Turrets are cheap enough to have a dedicated turret for each die set. Loads most any cartridge
Con's
Slower than a progressive, 4 handle pulls for each round, regular turret press is not as strong (but will work for most reloaders). Rebels at short stroking the handle.
Lee Pro 1000
Pro's
Cheap, puts out lots of ammo quickly, works well when you do your part.
Con's
Have to keep it clean and in adjustment, needs to be tinkered with occasionally, unforgiving of operator error and contamination, rebels at short stroking the handle. Not really designed for rifle reloading.
Any regular turret press
The only time saved is on die changes. Turret heads may too expensive to make it worth you time to buy enough for all your dies (the only thing I had against my lyman).
Dillon
Pro's
works good, produces lots of ammo, usually more forgiving of contamination and operator error, built like a tank accepts most rifle and pistol rounds
Cons
Initial cost is expensive. Addition caliber changes are expensive. Still requires some fiddling to keep it all working right. If it doesn't have an auto advance, it is very easy to double charge a load. Use a powder that will spill out of the case if double charged!
So for my .02
For a few hundred rounds per year on a tight budget, the lee auto index turret.
For several hundred rounds per year to a few 1000, you cant beat the lee classic turret (cast base). (This would be my suggestion to all but the most serious reloaders from newbies to well experienced)
For more rounds and several different calibers and your remotely mechanically inclined, a Lee progressive (mostly hangun or smaller rifles)
For 1000's of rounds in a single or very few calibers by all means go Blue if you can afford it.
For heavy duty sizing, get an single stage like the Lee classic cast so you wont be abusing your production presses.