For a press I'd suggest starting with the Lee Classic Turret. More practical than a progressive for low volume loading and more useful than a single stage. The only thing I didn't like about the Lee was the self indexing operation so I removed it from mine and find manual die indexing so much better. Since I got the Lee I don't use my Hornady AP progressive nearly as much as I used to.
In the mean time you can download lots of older, but still relevant, manuals from the below link.
index - powered by h5ai v0.30.0 ([url]https://larsjung.de/h5ai/)[/url]
Doesn't the turret have the auto-advance feature? All the newer ones do.My wife bought me a Lyman turret press kit 25 years ago. It sat in the box until about 5 years ago, and at first I loaded using the turret to compete each round.. I found it to be a pain rotating that turret hundreds of times. Now I set up all the dies in the turret, but I use it as a single stage press. I complete each stage of the process, one cartridge at a time. When it comes to loading powder, I put the powder in one case, and I immediately set the bullet. I do not charge more than one case at a time. I know this is a bit slower than what others do, but it works for me, and I don't worry about whether I have already charged a case or not.
I wish I hadn't waited 20 years to get started.
Doesn't the turret have the auto-advance feature? All the newer ones do.
I can see where rotating by hand would be a pain. But if the turret automatically advances to the next die with each pull of the handle it really speeds things up.
Well, the OP did say that his is a Lee press that his wife bought for him.The current Lyman and RCBS turret presses are both manual advance. Dillon and Hornady don't have a real turret press, they are actually progressive presses. As far as I know only the Lee turret press has an auto-advance.