I have been a fan of Lee products for about the last 40 years. Back in the early 70s, I didn't have a reloading press but every time I bought a new firearm, I would buy a Lee Loader for about $5, some brass, powder, bullets and primers and end up with my first 100 rounds for about the price of 2 boxes of loaded rifle ammo.
I started using Lee casting equipment in the late 70s. My cousin and I just happened to be stationed at the same Air Force Base and he had a Lee bottom pour pot and a 150 gr rn mold for a 357 mag bullet. I borrowed them and soon bought my own. The old Lee cookie cutter, lubber was a mess but it worked and I did lots of loading with that old lee stuff.
When Lee came out with Lee liquid Alox, I gave it a try and was pleasantly surprized to see that I got no leading, no matter how fast I shot the bullets. liquid Alox has a higher melting temp than lead. Try melting a lubed bullet sometime. The lead melts and runs and the lube is left, in the shape of the bullet. Lee claims that Lee liquid Alox will actually clean lead out of a barrel. They took a leaded up 45 auto barrel and weighed it then shot a bunch of liquid alox lubed bullets then weighed it again. It weighed less than when they started. I have not duplicated the test but I had a 357 max barrel that leaded up shooting full house Oregon Trail bullets through it. I tumble lubed some of the same bullets in liquid alox and shot a box of 50 through the barrel. When I got done the barrel was sparkling clean. Now I lube any cast bullet that I shoot in that barrel with liquid alox.
I do have a couple of presses and a Lyman 450 sizer and RCBS and Lyman bullet molds on my reloading bench but I also have lots of Lee molds, lead pots, dies, sizers, etc on my bench. By the way, That Lee Collet die is the best thing since sliced bread, for rimed bottle necked cases. It probably works good for any rifle case but I have eliminated streaching in my 30-30 and Hornet brass, with those collet dies.
Sixgun