All will become clear when you take your Nitrox course,
If only that were true. Agencies and shops seem to be fairly confused regarding equipment protocols for recreational nitrox, with lots of mention of 'nitrox clean' and 'nitrox regulators' and the various scenarios in which O2 clean is necessary for gear. You see statements floating around about the CGA (or some gas authority) recommending O2 protocols for anything over 23% O2, I have no idea if that's true, half-true, or outright fabrication, and each shop seems to their own ideas about what's 'correct.' Don't forget, the nitrox courses are typically taught by the very same people that are making up these rules at the shops.
Add that to the fact that at least two of the regulator manufacturers, atomic and scubapro, have released somewhat complicated legalese-esque policies about nitrox with titanium regulators. It's very easy to get confused.
Now, if in fact, as some polices imply, regulators 'should' be O2 cleaned for nitrox use, then in fact it would be appropriate to require the same of BC inflator valves hoses, and bladders. It's the same gas, and there's WAY more combustible material. How about drysuits? It's a slippery slope when you start talking about nitrox as being handled like pure O2.
And I am fairly certain that this is all 'fueled' (no pun intended) by one big magic word; money. The dive industry now relies on nitrox use in recreational diving; they want to make it as accessible as possible, and they would like to be able to generate revenue in as many ways as possible. Hence the less-than-forthwright "nitrox" version of the MK20; a blatant money-grab by SP. But, push the rules for special handling and gear requirements too far, and poof; it's a technical diving thing and there goes the big market. Meanwhile, there are actual concerns for safety. An O2 fire is a very nasty thing, regardless of the remote chances of it occurring in nitrox use.
The 'simplest' and generally accepted policy taught by the agencies is that anything exposed to 41% or higher needs to be O2 cleaned, and that's what most people will quote. This basically keeps O2 cleaning in the realm of technical diving, except for tanks filled with partial pressure blending, and by some stunning coincidence, keeps recreational nitrox as 40% or lower.
The oddball thing is that exactly what constitutes "O2 clean" and how to maintain it is likewise not clear. Hence the reference to not being able to use 'regular' scuba air in a tank that's O2 clean. That's only true if the air is not modified grade E, i.e not filtered to the same standard as air used in partial pressure blending. And of course there's a great deal of trust involved; trust that every single fill on a given tank is truly up to clean standards, for example.
And yet, somehow thousands of nitrox dives take place world-wide every day and you don't hear about tanks exploding or BCs bursting into flames.