Hi Minh Thanh
I concur, drilling a bunch of small holes sucks! Several of my products have small holes. I am calling .0635" a small hole.
I have drilled many thousands of these holes over the years. My advice for your upcoming hole jubilee is to first, make a fixture with a hardened bushing ( drill guide ) and then buy a sleeve of drills. Here in the USA they come in packs of 10 or 12. My preferred brand is PTD ( Precision Twist Drill ) They sell #52 drills by the dozen. My local supplier sells them to me for about $15.00/dozen. I have found over the years that it is far better to start with a brand new factory sharp drill, use a drill guide and change drills as soon as something odd happens. A funny sound, a clogged flute or any other oddity while drilling. I am drilling my holes on a CNC machine with a rigid fixture and a drill guide, drilling in steel. I can get about 200-250 holes to a drill before it will break. If it breaks, it usually trashes my drill guide and the part and cost me about a hour to get everything cleared up and reset. Those numbers above are much less on a manual machine.
For the cost of the drills I would change them out very often. Make a fixture for the rings and another for the pistons. With a replaceable drill bushing ( hardened ) It will be more work but I doubt you will scrap any parts or break any drills in your pistons or rings. And your parts will come out spot on. Overall saving you a lot of time and effort.
Again just my thoughts. But remember, small drills want to wander, especially on a curved surface. And drills don't like to be bent.
Some pics.
And one of my drilling fixtures
Again just suggestions.
I hope it offers some help or thoughts in your upcoming "bunch of tiny holes" marathon.
Scott