Ray,
I really like my Star. I also really like my Dillon 550B. My Star is a Universal in 45acp, which has had a primer tube explosion. It did not hurt me, but did kind of wear out my welcome at the house I had it set up in ( I was living in Sr. Enlisted Bachelor Qaurters on Fort McPherson at that time).
In my opinion an auto-indexing maching that could load both rifle and pistol cases, equipped with both auto case feeder and auto primer feed devices might well sell. It would have to be superior to the Dillon 1050 and sell for the same money or less.
While your thinking hat is on, here are a couple things I would like to buy. A machine to prep brass for high power, it would have to resize the brass without using an expender ball to open the case neck. That would be handled at a station where the hollow tube that expanded the neck similar to a Sinclair mandrel, would also permit a tool to deburr the flash hole. Swage the primer pocket crimp, and uniform the primer pocket, trim the case to length (max for the caliber), and chamfer the case neck inside and outside, for VLD bullets.
Seat a primer to a specified depth in the primer pocket, charge the case with the powder of your choice weighed like a Prometheus to .01 grains with an SD < .015 and ES for 22 charges of < .095 grains. Then seat the bullet of your choice to .001 = or - .0005" run out.
Oh it should cost less than $2K and produce at least 1000 rounds an hour. I am not being facetious, it appears that the road to getting into the reloading business is a tough one.
I truly wonder what a fellow who had Mike Dillon's or your business acumen could do if he owned the Star Machine rights.
If I had not just gotten promoted to Sergeant Major I might have been personally interested in this sort of venture, and may still well be in the future.
Respectfully,
Michael