I've got one of those and it works well. I've only used it for rifle loads which I do on a single-stage press.
I agree that the RCBS version is better than the Lee. When I need dies, though, I go with Lee.
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A friend of mine loves Federal small primer .45. He probably ate paint chips as a kid, but I indulge him by giving that shit to him.
I use mine for small quantity loading. One problem is that it's finicky with smaller cases (.32/.327).
I have several of those, one for LP and one SP. The beauty is I don't have to reconfigure the tool when I switch. I load everything using those and a SS press. There are two models. One uses shell holders and one doesn't. I set aside my shell holder model for the universal model which doesn't need a shell holder. It works fine for most cartridges but I noticed it doesn't like my 32 L brass for some reason. I'm not sure it's much of an improvement over the $50 model.
https://www.rcbs.com/priming/hand-he.../16-90201.html
I had in my odd brass assortment a .38 Special case with large primer. It wasn't weathered, somebody must have turned up old stock and shot it. I never saw a large primer .38 or .357 when I started shooting them in the late 1960s.
In those days, it wouldn't add much to the reloaders' problems.
Phil Sharpe distinguished between corrosive and noncorrosive primers, and flat vs domed cups.
Earlier this year, I saw where a guy found an old Frankford Arsenal .45 that would not accept a large primer and a small primer "just fell out." Yup, FA .45s at one time had a .204" primer to prevent getting rifle primers in pistol ammo and vice versa. In its day, you could get the ammo and primers cheap through NRA-DCM.