The Dillon Square Deal looks interesting, but it appears not to reload .32 Auto and 9 Makarov.
The Square Deal B ('SBD') is a very compact, and highly specialized progressive. Due to the
very limited number of dies (it does not accept 'standard' reloading dies)
the list of calibers is very constrained. The lowest denominator "all around" Dillon press is the BL550, which can be "built-out" over time to a 550B with the addition of accessories.
All of the 550 lineup are "manually progressing" presses. This means it's much easier to use as a single stage because the shell holder
does not advance with each op handle pull. You can sit there and re-seat 50 times if needed. It's that "feature" than makes the 550 behave as a single-stage. BUT, if you advance the shell plate, then you'll get 1 finished round ejected with each pull of the handle, just like an SBD, 650, RCBS 2000, or Hornady LNL.
Compare that to the Lee Classic Cast Turret which holds one cartridge at a time and and may or may not advance the turret (depending upon the setup) over the single cartridge. So that although you only handle the cartridge once (a great time savings) you still need to pull the op lever 3 times to produce a single finished cartridge.
So once you get into that "semi-progressive" or "fully progressive" type press, then the questions of
volume output vs.
cost of initial setup questions kick in. While the Lee turret offers a very interesting and HIGHLY cost competitive solution, if your volumes are running something like 500 per week, then you'd do well to remember that the Lee is going to require
1500 lever pulls, while a progressive is going to require
503 to do the same work. If you are of the age that 3 times the repetitive motion could cause shoulder pain, then that should possibly figure into your calculation.