Make sure you have a drill specific to your application both in material and drill design. Use fixture the bit as close to the work as you can using a drill press. Alternatively insert the bit deep in to the chuck so you have minimal exposure.
There are maybe 7,000 grades of carbide depending on how you count and how you feel about brand names. Wood drill bits won’t drill steel well.
To give you an idea of the range of applications, here are the traditional C grades from WW II.
C grades classification
C-1 to C-4 are general grades for cast iron, non-ferrous and non-metallic materials
C-1 Roughing
C-2 General Purpose
C-3 Finishing
C-4 Precision
Steel and steel alloys - these grades resist pitting and deformation
C-5 Roughing
C-6 General Purpose
C-7 Finishing
C-8 Precision
Wear Surface
C-9 No shock
C-10 Light shock
C-11 Heavy shock
Impact
C-12 Light
C-13 Medium
C-14 heavy
Miscellaneous
C-15 Light cut, hot flash weld removal
C-15A Heavy cut, hot flash weld removal
C-16 Rock bits
C-17 Cold header dies
C-18 Wear at elevated temperatures and/or resistance to chemical reactions
C-19 Radioactive shielding, counter balances and kinetic applications
Thomas J. Walz
Carbide Processors, Inc.
Good engineering starts with a Grainger Catalog.