Spiral flute and spiral point taps are intended for machine use, and the important feature is that the swarf is controlled. A spiral point tap has straight, angled, cutting edges that push the swarf ahead of the tap, ideal for through holes. A spiral flute tap actually has spiral flutes, which push the swarf back and out of the hole. In a ductile material the swarf tails can be inches long.
To re-iterate both types can easily be used for hand tapping. I find it ok starting spiral flute taps by hand up to about M6. Above that it gets more difficult. A spiral flute tap only cuts on the first thread or two, so is as good, or better, than a bottoming tap for threading depth in a blind hole.
While I often use spiral flute taps by hand they really come into their own under power. With the right tapping heads they can be run fast. I run from 500rpm to over a 1000rpm on my manual machines. It's way quicker tapping the hole than drilling it in the first place.
Andrew
Edited By Andrew Johnston on 14/09/2019 00:01:38