@stuartv it isn't an excuse to not analyze the tank. It's a historically deadly variable that can be minimized with a $150 max purchase for aluminum bottles.
Unless you are somehow able to be SURE that the person filling that cylinder will never put a gas in it that is different than what the MOD sticker says, I just don't see it.
And I do realize that some of you fill your own cylinders and so you may be able to do that.
But, I don't fill my own cylinders. I believe fill station operators occasionally make mistakes. Anything from doing a blend that ends up "off" from the target (e.g. 70% when I asked for 80%) to just putting the completely wrong gas in. So, I don't see how dedicated bottles really would make a difference - to me. I analyze when I get a fill, and label the tank with the mix, my initials and the date, regardless of what the MOD sticker says. If the MOD sticker does not match what's in the tank, I take the MOD sticker off.* No big deal to take it off, since it cost me almost nothing. No thought of "that sticker cost me money and I'll just have to put another one right back on after this one dive. I'll just leave it on there and remember that it's not really correct for this one dive. No big deal. The actual MOD is deeper anyway, so I'm safe."
I would rather use a process that makes it normal to change the MOD sticker every time, so that I know it always matches what is in the cylinder than a process that requires me to do something "exceptional" in the case that my cylinder ends up with a fill that does not exactly match the label. A process where, if I don't have to change the MOD sticker, "oh, that's nice." Not, "oh, dang. The guy put 50% in my O2 bottle and O2 in my 50% bottle. Crap. I don't have time to drain these bottles and redo them. Crap. I need to find some stickers..."
And I analyze again before I use it.
Anyway, I think we're going pretty far OT and I'm not trying to tell anyone else how to manage your cylinders or MOD stickers. In the end, it seems that we are all going to analyze before we dive and make sure the MOD sticker matches the gas... I was just chiming in on what I do for MOD stickers. Not trying to start a debate on whether to dedicate cylinders to specific gases (thanks PfcAj!

* now that I think about it, if I am asking for a fill that does not match what the MOD sticker says, I will start removing the MOD sticker before I hand the cylinder over for a fill. That will help ensure no cylinder ever has an MOD sticker that does not match the contents. But, going further down that road, it seems like maybe that should be SOP for ALL cylinder fills. No MOD sticker is ever on a cylinder until after it has been filled and analyzed. Only then would the MOD sticker be put on. That would make SURE that you never have gas that doesn't match the MOD sticker. Unless you put the sticker on the wrong cylinder right after you just analyzed it....