Ok cool, that's some good info. It seems my phone doesn't want me to write Forster.... hopefully I've fixed that now. I've had very good luck with my Redding dies over the years in terms of what they produce and their quality, it just seems like Forster is more popular, especially the seating die. Honestly, I'd rather try out some new dies for my single presses and use the existing ones on the dillon for a few reasons, so I may do it that way for most of them but will probably get a Forster seating die also to try out too. Thank you for the information!
So a little off topic but since we've worked out a way to allow me to use the whole room now for my new loading room, I will probably be getting another Dillon or maybe 2 more to complete my room set up. I will always have a 550 and my turret single stage press , but would you rather a 750 or 1050 to do all the stuff that you would want to feed bullets and cases ect and crank out ammo?
Yes to always having a 550. Inexpensive, easy to changeover and use, can produce great ammo. No reason not to.
Personally I think the other question depends on two things:
1.) How much ammo are you shooting? Less than 5k of any one caliber?
2.) What’s your budget for automation and caliber changeovers?
If you shoot 5k or more of 9mm or 223, or you process a lot of 300blk, then a 1050/1100 makes more sense.
If you also easily have the budget for the $3k automation, then yes again.
If you only shoot 1-2k of any one caliber and you shoot a lot of calibers, then 750 is easier, faster, and cheaper. You can also automate the 750 so that works as well for future use.
Tertiary option. If you know you shoot a shit ton of 1 caliber, then an automated Mark 7 is probably the best answer.