Odd, my drill doctor works pretty well.
Didn't at first, but once I read the instructions a little more carefully and sharpened them the way they said instead of the way I thought it should work, then it began to work fine.
Some with extra wide webbing, or odd spirals take more effort to figure out, but for basic standard bits its no problem providing they don't get the **** beat out of them.
Unfortunately where I work the words 'slow' and 'oil' don't seem to get through, so the bits usually have the **** beat out of them. For those I have to set the doctor up and run them until it quits making noise, then reset the bit and make the recommended number of turns.
I won't say they are as sharp as a brand new good quality bit, but they are good enough to peel off nice spirals or chips depending on what I'm drilling.
I actually can sharpen bits by hand, or at least I could before the DD made me lazy.
But doing that requires a nice fine grinding stone in good shape, also something hard to keep in a shop, the last time I had a fine wheel on my grinder I found it slap full of aluminum. Yeah, I can find my dressing tool, and fix it, and then sharpen the bits, but that's more hassle.
Also a coarse/medium stone and wire wheel is a more functional combo on a grinder.
Plus over time my hand sharpened drill bits would drift off from the angle they should be and not work very well.
I suppose if I did it every day instead of once every six months I would be a lot better at it, but since I don't need to sharpen anywhere near that many bits I get rusty at it.