The reason you go up through the drill bits is cutting speed. The centre of the drill moves at a peripheral speed much slower than the tip. Each metal has the optimum cutting speed, ft/min or m/min that the cutting edge should removal material. Too fast or too slow can cause chatter and create poor finish and lots of vibration……which destroys the cutting edge.
So, you centre drill to ensure the start of the hole is precisely on centre. Centre drills have a different point to standard drills and are stubby and very rigid. Getting on centre is important to both reduce vibration and for accuracy. You then step up drill sizes, and adjust rotation speed accordingly. The larger the drill the slower you go. Technically you also adjust the feed rate, ie the amount of downward pressure you apply. The larger the drill the more pressure is required.
So, you centre drill to ensure the start of the hole is precisely on centre. Centre drills have a different point to standard drills and are stubby and very rigid. Getting on centre is important to both reduce vibration and for accuracy. You then step up drill sizes, and adjust rotation speed accordingly. The larger the drill the slower you go. Technically you also adjust the feed rate, ie the amount of downward pressure you apply. The larger the drill the more pressure is required.