I love Ingenuity almost as much as I love Capitalism. Usually I'm trying to restrict variables in order to make a more precise part. I'm a Deep Draw Toolmaker by trade, and develop/run Mechanical, Servo, and Eyelet presses. Equipment that is North of 5 million to a few hundred thousand. I currently run 2 decked out 650's, a Forster Coax, and Hornady 50bmg press. Personally I see more benefit in checking the brass wall thickness and investing in top self reloading dies than spending 3k on a dropper and annealer. Like Ferris said, " It is so choice. If you have the means, I highly recommend picking one up." Maybe when RCBS makes something similar for $350, Ill pounce? Some of the hardest drawn parts I run have o-ring dies that allow the die to float with the punch. I would never buy a zero press, because you will never find reloading tooling that is precise enough to keep everything concentric, or brass that is uniform. Induction is really, really cool. I'm guessing the thickness, brass purity, and oxidation plays a big part in consistency? Honestly, I thought scopes technology would have advanced a lot over the last 10 years. People still fight over Mil vs MOA and reticles are very gimmicky. I'm still trying to figure out if I want a Tremor3 or Horus59 in my next Barska. Regardless, I'm stoked Hide Members are still killing it and can drop hard earned $ on Equipment!