60 years accumulation of reloading gear and experience. We've gotten way too annal in our approach to reloading. I load in my shop. Behind me is my shop. Even after 60 years I'm constantly changing things as my needs change. I just moved my single stage press to the main bench(I'd been using it just for case forming) and one of my turret presses to where the single stage and use it for trimming.
1. A decent cast-iron press. I use a Lyman crusher press but have used RCBS Rockchucker, Hornady O-press, C&H Magnum and Lee Cast-Classic. They all work I just ended up after trades and offers too high to refuse with the lyman and it works. If I were starting out with just one press I look at something with Lock and Load bushings(I hate adjusting dies).
2. I have a number of case trimmers, Redding, Forester, Wilson, Herters(same as Wilson), the little Lee with cutter case length guage(never fails, but slow) and now Lee quick trim dies and cutter. I really like the Lee Quick Trim dies and have set up one of my turret-presses with seven dies(again I hate adjusting), they would work well with LnL bushings. Along with trimmers I like to chamfer with a hand held chamfer tool and clean primer pockets by hand. I like to handle my brass and can inspect as I work. I also can move this operation to the living room and spend time with my wife.
3. Scales, I've putzed with e-scales and just don't trust them, with a balance beam scale I can see if something is wrong and fix it. E-scales I have it have faith in the readout and cant tell if it is wrong and they need to be calibrated with each use. I have old oil dampened scales that are older than me that are still accurate. I use a pair of RCBS 510's
4. Calipers, hard to get along without them, I have four on the bench all dial again had too much trouble with digital, keeping batteries in them etc. Along with the calipers I really like the Hornady comparator that clamps on the caliper blade, grate for adjust bump/headspace when sizing brass.
5. Priming tools, I really like the original Lee Hand priming tool, I like to feel the primes going in. I do like ones that take standard Shell holders and have used the priming arm on a press for small batch loading.
6. Powder measures, I have seven sitting on or over the bench some permanently set for something I load a lot of ( I hate adjusting) labeled with the powder and loads. One thing that is really important to me is a micrometer adjustable measure. Ones that you loosen the nut and slide the rod are just a pain, all gone. Dippers while archaic are handy to use, just this morning I wanted to load five rounds to experiment and a dipper was faster than anything.
7. Lubing brass, I almost exclusively use Imperial sizing wax, I hate One-Shot(I dont have the patients for it), lanolin/alcohol based sprays have work for high volume loading.
8. loading manuals have everything you need to know with diagrams and explanations I have at least a dozen dating back to the 1970's. They are the bibles of reloading, Lyman, Hornady and Sierra are my gotos.
Pretty much everything else is fluff, I've never tumble a piece of brass(I kill stuff and win things), necks get cruddy and a 3m pad cleans them, You can smoke bullets to find the lands, you can easily anneal with a socket and drill. I bought a chronograph 20 years ago when I was developing some new wildcats and it has set in its box for 15 yrs. your loading manual will tell you approximately how fast your bullet is traveling and range time will give you your drops.
You need to decide what you want to spend and what your goals are.
Have fun and enjoy reloading it is almost as much fun as shooting.
AWS