Re: Too much time to reload,is this normal.
1. Tumble brass: I decap and then tumble - either way, it only takes 10 minutes to decap 100 rounds or so. I then dump them in the tumbler and leave it on while I am at work or sleeping as others mentioned. Separating the brass from the media is a more time intensive portion for me since I have a whole jug of Lyman Corn Cob to go through and it's the perfect size to get gummed up in the flash hole and not easily pour out of the bottle neck cases. I switched to stainless and it's much faster with better results, but I still need to check all the flash holes for rods. I don't use a media separator - I do it by hand for each way. For some reason I have just never purchased a media separator. I use stainless for the first major cleaning since the results are ridiculously good and 90% of the time I'm doing range pickup .223, 9mm, .45 and .40 that can be pretty nasty. It really helps keep the Dillon 550 clean when I decap on my single stage and then do SS cleaning because there's no primer residue and any carbon flaking that would happen during resizing is taken care of before hand by it.
2. Deprime: Already covered for me, but if you choose to just tumble and then decap/resize on a single die it shouldn't take more than 15 minutes to lube and resize/decap. I cut the top off of a 9mm plastic bullet case (holds .223 for lubing perfectly. A .45 case will hold .308 the same way.) I then put the cases in and spray RCBS spray lube over all of them.
4. Trim case: About 5-10 seconds per case, including hand cranking each one and loading/removing it from the RCBS trimmer. Once I have the trimmer set it holds a constant measurement no matter how many cases I need to do. I keep a scrap case for each rifle caliber at the desired trim-to length to quickly adjust the cutter depth after changing calibers.
5. Primer Pocket: Varies based on whether or not I'm using new brass or previously prepped by me since I use a primer pocket uniformer on .308. Uniformer uniforms in addition to cleaning. Could take up to 20 seconds per case using an RCBS power case prep center if it's new winchester brass. With once/previously fired and prepped by me it's usually a 2-3 second process. With .223 I skip this step since it's for bulk loading and the stainless media cleans out the primer pockets (hence why I decap prior to tumbling).
6. Sonic clean: I did away with US cleaning as soon as I got a stainless setup. Here I would throw all cases back in the corn cob vibratory tumbler - anywhere from 15 to 45 mins or so depending on how many cases I have to take off the lube, but usually depends on what I have going on - you'll never find me sitting in front of the tumbler waiting for it. I find the vibratory corn cob method to take off lube is quicker for a final polish/lube removal than using the stainless unit again.
7. Prime case: With the RCBS hand primer set up for .308, maybe 2 seconds per case. I use a Dillon 550 for .223 and pistol, so it's only however long it takes to load the primer tube since it's part of the progressive process on that.
8. Load Powder: About 20-30 seconds per case for precision loading. I throw about a consistent couple of grains shy and then trickle each charge up. Definitely one of the more time consuming parts behind removing tumbling media.
9. Seat bullet: I use the same RCBS micrometer seating die you mentioned. I'll seat the first round a little long, fine tune it with the micrometer until it's at desired ogive depth (using a comparator to check each bullet) and then note where the hask mark is. Before seating the next bullet, I will back the micrometer off a couple of hashes to seat the next bullet long, measure it, fine tune the micrometer, measure again. It's usually only a seat, measure, adjust and seat a hair deeper, measure, good to go process. No more than 20 seconds per round or so and that's being nit-picky.