Once again a no-nonsense approach to Reg servicing. He's right on all accounts, there's NO LDS tech that would spend that much time, they couldn't. No that that is neccessarily a bad thing, but the bottom line is, you do more.
Because its my butt at 100'.
While a tech may be very qualified and very good, the simple fact of the matter is that no tech is going to take my place at 100' and die for me if he screws up.
Since I know the price of a mistake, I also am able to calibrate the amount of effort I will undertake to avoid that mistake, and the amount of verification that I believe is reasonable in pursuit of not making a mistake.
For instance, I am willing to tolerate some IP creep in the first stage that feeds my O2 analyzer. Why? Its never dove. It has a metering orifice on it that means it is never operated into a "dead head" - that is, a closed second stage - because the metering orifice is always bleeding gas for the analyzer to analyze. As such the "creep" never actually happens, because the stage is never called upon to actually lock up gas-tight against primary pressure.
Also, if it fails, it will do so in my garage while analyzing gas. That is hardly catastrophic and is certainly not dangerous to anyone's health. If it locks up I simply need to fix it. If it freeflows radically it could blow up the LP hose, which will be very annoying, but its unlikely to do any real damage other than cause me to need to launder my underwear.
This calibration of risk and care in execution is particularly important if you're going to do things that are not quite "by the book", although I will note that an awful lot of the book seems to get changed without prior notice even by the so-called "pros" - witness how many different seats SP has come out with for the same reg over time, or their nearly-constant tinkering with O-ring compounds and such in their rebuild kits and service info.
How many of those regs are out there with a "superseded" part or three in them? I bet that the number is awfully high....
One of the problems with "generic shop work" is that an awfully large number of people take really poor care of their gear. It gets abused, not to put too fine a point on it. Its not rinsed well after use, is put away wet, is not overhauled when it should be, people don't pay attention to the fact that there's "just a little leak" coming from their first stage somewhere, etc.
The "manufacturers official way" has to deal with this, and still make something that if it fails will do so in a way that won't completely hose the user.
The "personal responsibility" way has none of those problems. If my first stage is leaking, I fix it. If its breathing funny or making funny noises, I fix it. If I get salt water in it by accident, I tear it down and fix it. It always gets rinsed in fresh water. I don't blow water up the second-stage and back into the first. I tear it down on more frequent intervals than "officially" recommended - after all, the O-rings to do a "quick service" cost me a whole fifty cents or so - so why not? In short, I take care of it.
All of this conspires to make me an uncommon user, and therefore not subject to the "severe service" that the ordinary recommendations must tolerate.