I'd stay far far away from the Hornady LNL. I had one setup up with caliber swaps for 9mm, .45, 10mm and .223 complete with case feeder. It was alright at first but got to where it wouldn't seat a large primer all the way to bottom to save its life. They have since really upgraded the case feeder housing to not be a flimsy POS and it probably doesn't drop more brass on your head than it feeds down the tube now.
Hornady tried to make it right, there was nothing broken on it, it was just the nature of the design. Those monstrous cam links are too far apart and when you seated a primer the entire ram would rotate away from the priming punch thereby not applying enough force to seat. Bouncing off if you will.
I sold it with full disclosure and bought a 650. The build quality is vastly superior to the LNL. I won't be selling off my 650 for a 750 and the Redding T7 turret press sitting beside it is a beast. Super handy for load development and small batch rifle type stuff. I typically have a decapping die, a Redding GRx die and a couple of die sets in it ready to go.