CB, the indexing cannot be defeated on this press, but since the OP has 15 years on other equipment, I don't think that will cause him a learning problem.
Brassguy,
Congratulations on your find.
You want a solid mount for this press. I make my benches about 41" high for my comfort, but many are 34 or 36 inches, and I would recommend some sort of tall mount for such a bench so your aren't at all bent over when you stand for loading. A bar stool is a good way to sit at a press on a tall bench or on tall mounts. Both Dillon and Inline Fabrication make tall mounts for this press. Dillon's are called Strong Mounts, and Inline's are called Ultramounts, which cost more than the Dillons, but add some tray storage.
The bench and mount need to be solid. You will find you get in the habit of giving the press handle a shove to seat primers solidly. The press likes easy-to-seat primers. Before their process change in 1992, CCI were too hard to seat consistently in mine, often coming out high, but are OK in it now. Today it is mainly the primers made overseas (Tula, Wolf, and I've heard, but not tried myself, S&B) still have cup burrs and are tough to seat and will give you high primers in that press. This can be problematic as a primer that is too high at the seating station can jam the indexing.
Rig a light or buy one of the light kits sold by Inline Fabrication so you can easily check powder level in the case as you set the bullet in place for seating. It is pretty rare that there is a problem. The biggest risk is pulling a case for some problem then putting it into station 2 for recharging after forgetting to dump the original charge. Highly improbable, but it can happen, so, better safe than sorry.
The newer primer tube primer feed column follower rods have more weight at the top than the originals (which I have) did. A lot of us over the years have placed an inverted case over top of it to add weight to help ensure a primer is picked up by the carrier each time. Things get vibrated around on these presses (a lot goes on with each stroke) and an occasional primer tipped slightly sideways by that will fail to drop into the feed lips. The added weight seems to solve that.
Periodically remove and push an alcohol dampened Q-tip through the primer feed tube and your primer pickup tubes to clean any primer dust out. These days I use Federal primers pretty exclusively in mine, and they have a lacquer sealant that seems to be effective at stopping dust release. But do the cleaning anyway. Primer tube explosions are rare, but when they do happen, they are usually credited to priming mix dust having built up. You can find discussion on this by searching this forum for old threads on the matter. Again, it is rare, but something to be avoided, since you can do so by cleaning.