"I was thinking it would be better to laser drill these first because i couldn't see how i could drill through stainless without the drill bits breaking or it taking hours, my stainless is 0.008" thick. I presume from your post your material was metallic, about 0.015" thick and you purchased a micro drilling machine. How long did it take to get through the 0.015 inches? And how many holes did you have to drill per part for a yield of 80%? I've had a look at National Jet and they are definitely the route to take.
Yes, the holes were from 10 to 20 L/D in stainless steel. Drilling time was about 10 minutes per part maybe longer, it's been more than 10 years, but most of the time was spent in setup (getting zero spin-out on the drill bit end is a bear with the tiny bits).
The micro-drilling machine was made in japan, and had pre-programmed numerical control for micro drilling. We rented the machine on a demo basis, and ended up returning it after we found Nat. Jet. The drilling machine used a peck drilling cycle, and had a sensor that detected the torque on the drill chuck, and would try to back out if the torque rose beyond a preset limit - but it still broke drill bits from time to time, and the effect of a broken bit was a scrapped part for us.
When I took parts to Nat. Jet, they let me visit a very narrow area of their shop, and had tarps put up so that all I got to see was one drilling machine, manually controlled. They used jeweler's microscopes to view the drill bit, and had trained operators to set up and run the parts. They completed a job for us of 30 parts, zero scrap, in about 3 or 4 hours (I left, and came back later in the day to check in and the parts were finished). They were very protective of their knowledge, and rightly so in my mind. We had very good success with them as a vendor. I do remember they sent me their business card, and it had a sample hair with a wire threaded through it taped to the back. That card was pretty useful in convincing others in our shop that they could do the job for us, prior to giving them the work.