I'm out of town but I'd be glad to when I get back. I made my own bullet collator out of aluminum, a bbq rotisserie motor and a piece of plastic cutting board, and I purchased a "dropper die" from double alpha which I highly recommend over the Hornady die which is a POS. Basically it drops a bullet into the case after powder charging and before seperate seat and crimp stations. I wish I had a 6th station for a powder cop, but I'm working on a solution to that which won't take a station hopefully.
If you're willing to seat and crimp in on the last station (5) then you can also have a cop but I like seperate because I'm a wimp.
I like this system because my right hand stays planted on the lever and my left hand is only tasked with picking up a case, looking it over and placing it in the plate.
I also have a 550 and to me the work flow is all messed up, but I like it for rifle case loading only. It's my belief that any case capable of holding a double charge should be loaded on either a auto index progressive, or a single stage. That's just my opinion. So if I double charge a rifle case on the 550, I'm informed of it by the powder spill.
These machines all have a lot of flexibility on how you can use them, so everyone has a different setup it seems and also a different purpose. Some guys only use a progressive as a dedicated case prep machine. The Hornady is the most bang for the buck in this regard, a quality piece of gear that will not wear out and is very nicely made, and adaptable to many purposes.