I agree with Jim -- look for used equipment. Facebook Marketplace works -- I found a #40 press, 2 demijohns (54 and 25 liter), and other stuff for less than half the price of the press alone. The downside to that is you have to look every few days.
If you are bulk aging for at least 4 months, you can skip this. I did a test last year and identified that kieselsol and chitosan (ingredients in Super-Kleer) strip aroma and introduce a slight bitter taste.
3.2 gallon basket wine press - wood basket
A #20 press is 2.5 gallons and #25 is 5.0 gallons, so I'm not sure what a 3.2 gallon is. Note the # of the press is the internal diameter of the basket in cm, so a #20 press is 7.8" across and #25 is 9.8".
My press is a #40 (15.7"), which is 18.5 gallons. I can fit 8 lugs (288 lbs) of grapes in it, which is what I make to fill 55 liter (14.5 US gallons) barrels. You need about 1/3 that much grapes to fill a 19 liter carboy. Pictures of my press are in
this post.
If you're planning to make significant quantities of wine in one batch, your intended press will require frequent reloads.
Also, do not buy Chinese manufacture. They are noted for inferior metal and chipping paint. Read the reviews before you buy.
Use #9 corks. #8's are a smaller diameter and will not necessarily seal all bottles well, and will allow more O2 ingress sooner.
If you think you're long term serious, buy a floor corker. A lot of folks like the Portuguese corker (red one) and when you putting a lot of corks in a bottle, you'll be happy you have it.
I have the (blue) Italian corker, which is a lot larger, and it will put a cork in any bottle. The down side is that it's more expensive.
The above post is part of my
Wines … in Detail post series. I try to make them all different, focusing on various aspect of winemaking. I don't pull punches -- I write about the good, the bad, and the ugly. This may give you a better feel for what may actually happen, as I don't pretty things up.