What are the key factors for determining if a drill bit is suitable for steel? I have been through several of the threads here as well as manufacturer pages and am still not clear. The bit material (e.g. HSS, Carbide, Titanium, Tin coated), manufacturer, tip shape? I'm assuming some combination of the above.
I'm a home car restorer. Drilling steel with a hand drill or drill press. I recently bought what I thought was a decent set of Dewalt Pilot Point Titanium Drill Bits. I tried to drill a 1/8" piece of steel with my press over the weekend, and the Dewalt wasn't doing it. Even with Tap Magic cutting fluid and progressing up from smaller to large bits.

Out of frustration, I went to my local HW store and bought a Milwaukee Red Helix Cobalt bit that cost more than the entire Dewalt set because it said "hard metal". Lo and behold, it went through that piece with no effort. So a win for that bit, but I'm not clear and what made it better.

I'm willing to spend a couple hundred bucks if it means having a set of bits that I can use on metal and not have to think twice. I see good comments on Norseman, Triumph, etc. What makes them better? I see a few sets of Triump on sale at Trick Tools who seems to do a good job of curating quality products. Even visiting Triumph site it's not clear why you'd choose one over the other. Thunderbit Black and Bronze, Cobalt HSS, TiN, and TriNADO are all listed as suitable for steel.
I'm a home car restorer. Drilling steel with a hand drill or drill press. I recently bought what I thought was a decent set of Dewalt Pilot Point Titanium Drill Bits. I tried to drill a 1/8" piece of steel with my press over the weekend, and the Dewalt wasn't doing it. Even with Tap Magic cutting fluid and progressing up from smaller to large bits.

Out of frustration, I went to my local HW store and bought a Milwaukee Red Helix Cobalt bit that cost more than the entire Dewalt set because it said "hard metal". Lo and behold, it went through that piece with no effort. So a win for that bit, but I'm not clear and what made it better.

I'm willing to spend a couple hundred bucks if it means having a set of bits that I can use on metal and not have to think twice. I see good comments on Norseman, Triumph, etc. What makes them better? I see a few sets of Triump on sale at Trick Tools who seems to do a good job of curating quality products. Even visiting Triumph site it's not clear why you'd choose one over the other. Thunderbit Black and Bronze, Cobalt HSS, TiN, and TriNADO are all listed as suitable for steel.

