Re: Need reloading equipment advise.
" If someone could give me a hand on what I should order, it would be much appreciated."
Ah yes, everyone's favorite question!
As you can see, different people have different ideas. And most want you to steer you to the things they love more than what you suggested you want! Going back to what you actually asked, a lot of these suggestions are much more costly than you appear to need or even want.
Perhaps the nicest thing is they are all right, in that it all works quite well. None of our makers produce poor tools, and most of it is excellant. You can certainly use their lists as a guide for most of what's needed and even some of what's merely helpful.
The highest priced items can be the press, dies and scales. Let me suggest some high grade alternatives at much less cost than what some have suggested.
Don't spend the money for costly prestige dies - so called BR or Competiton types - at this point. Few of us really ever out grow standard dies; they work very well and it takes a lot of experience to be able to actually benefit from "better" dies. Lee's dies are actually as good as any others and Lee includes shell holders as part of their sets but their lock rings can be a bit agravating to some folks. I use them for some cartridges and have no problems.
Lee makes a really great single stage cast iron press, their Classic Cast, that's massively big, strong and makes ammo equal to any but at MUCH less cost than their competitors. It has some unique user features that are quite helpful too. If you think you will want to load the handgun ammo in larger than "normal" quanities you might up-grade to Lee's Classic Turret, same basic press but it has an auto-indexing head that really speeds up loading quite a bit. I've been happy with a single stage press for over fourty years of reloading but I don't shoot large quanities either. And for the life of me, I can't figger out why anyone needs a "quick change" die swapping system.
RCBS sells a scale, "505", that is excellant, durable and very long lived at a rational price for the quality. Ditto the similar Redding scale.
You will likely want a powder trickler to bring rifle charges up to weight. Only the Redding and Hornady tricklers are heavy enough and smooth enough to work well.
For a powder measure/dispenser go one of two ways; Lee's "Perfect" measure isn't perfect but it's cheap and actually works very well. For best priced cast iron measures, Redding's 3BR and the Hornady LnL both come with a good micrometer head. (They won't work any better than the Lee but they will look more impressive on your bench!) And get a bench stand for whatever you buy, using a powder measure on a single stage press sucks for convienence.
You'll need a case length trimmer for the rifle. Nothing beats the Wilson trimmer and the price is reasonable. And get a case mouth chamfering/deburring tool too, any of them will do you fine.
Harbor Freight Tools sells the exact same calipers, both digital and dial, as those sold by the reloading companies but for about $12 on sale, as they often are. Get the dial type, no batteries to be dead when you need them.
Get a powder funnel and two case holding/loading blocks, any brand.
Use Redding's Imperial Die Wax or Hornady's Unique case lube. Apply it with your finger tips as you pick each case up and don't bother with a case lube pad at all, they get nasty fast. (Lube should be applied completely but very thin.)
You'll eventually get a case stuck in your sizing die so get a stuck case puller tool up front. You will also need a bullet puller from time to time, get the more versitile impact type. RCBS has good designs for both jobs. (Collet bullet pullers look neat but are more costly, they rarely work well with handgun ammo and are little, if any, faster than the impact/hammer types. You aren't likely to need to pull down massive quanities anyway.)
You MUST have a reloading manual. The better ones have lots of loading data for multipul bullets and powders PLUS a good section of well written and illustrated newbie instuctions. Lee, Hornady and Lyman are good but the current Lyman #49 has cut way down on the list of charges they include. You really DON'T NEED more than one manual to start, or for a long time afterwards. They all have different suggestions for the same cartridges so multipule books simply add to the confusion factor and provide absolutely no added help. I have a pile of them but it's mostly for my interest reading only. The only valid reason anyone has to NEED more manuals is if they have a new cartridge or want to try a powder their present manual doesn't list. IMHO.
IF you want to get a case tumbler, get a vib type. They are moderatly inexpensive, very easy and quick to use and they do a good enough job for any practical shooter's need. Use either walnut or corn cob media, no matter which because both types work. Cabela's, Berry's or MidwayUSA's tumblers are usually the lowest cost and there is no effective difference between brands or prices anyway. Ignore case media polish additives, shine helps nothing and the brass starts tarnishing as soon as they come out anyway. (I can't understand the fasination some have with plastic looking glittery cases. All we need is clean, the rest is useless fluff. IMHO.)
Keep your head down, chin up and stay safe during the next months. We'll want to hear from you while you're gone too.