What kind of batting and what type of quilt? The reason I ask, it is hard to quilt through multiple layers, no matter what type needle.
I don't think you can't get really small stitches using a large fat needle through lots of layers, unless you stab stitch. I have hand quilted many years, and use Roxanne, Bohin, John James and Richard Hemming needles sizes 10-12 with YLI quilting thread on the wooden spool with my quilt in a 12 inch hoop. Any good English needle works, as long as you can thread the eye and it doesn't bend or break. You will discern quickly what you like. I use a flat top thimble, loading two or three stitches at a time. Someone told me I am a side stitcher, whatever that means. I wear a rubber cot on my thumb, that grips the needle. One of my friends wears the cot on the forefinger. Whatever works to avoid carpal tunnel, right? I can't sew a stitch without that cot to help grip the needle, even to hand applique. Habit I guess, like getting used to a thimble. In the beginning I started with a leather thimble, then plastic, and now the metal chaised one with a flat top from Colonial needle company. You can find rubber finger cots at quilting, office or art supply stores. My eyesight appreciates Bohin's and Roxanne's Big Eye needles. And, have you seen Minick and Simpson's BIG STITCH quilt demonstration on Utube? Love it. The perle cotton with a big needle applying BIG STITCHES in CONTRASTING thread adds a really cool design element. I just pieced that top, Sunburst, and let me tell you I see why it need big stitches
zillion layers coming together. So it goes. I would love to hear what you are quilting and what you decide works for you.