Glad the liddle ones are worth buying, along with cheap titanium nitride ones good too.
Recently bought some fancy cobalt bits, just for hardened stuff.
Cheap bits are good for learning to sharpen on.
Took me sometime to figure out what I was doing wrong
(using a method similar to AvE but with a bench grnder)
Not seen folks mention this, but having the grinder on a low bench meant I was stooping and not presenting the bit low enough on the wheel for the clearance right behind the edges, but was grinding plenty of clearance to the back of the bevels.
How to know if you're grinding behind the edge to give enough clearance,
is to, along with a small bit of relief, try and get a smile shape on the bevels, you might find holding lower down on the wheel that this is easier.
Chances are that you will be grinding right behind the edge that way.
Likely worth knocking up a wee jig, this works grand,
And this one too, which is handy if you're table has a dip....
Not a sure way whatsoever to detect runout though
Tip from this mornings reading
Find a long bit, roll it on the bench to check for wobble and align the bit with something
even the table tilted 90 or whatever, and a soft mallet might get you by,
obviously after you've already knocked out the arbor and chuck already,
and no tooling to check properly.