from the main line to a branch you can use a vic fitting that has U bolts on one side that go around the pipe and the other side is a cast steel plate with a flat O ring glued to it...that way you can drill a hole in the main and put the vic fitting on and tighten it down. those fittings are very expensive, so that's probably why you've never seen them. i never said anything about using vic fittings on the whole thing all the way down to the sprinkler head. i said threaded.
as for throwing a few hundred feet up in a day, what i mean by crew size is a 3 man crew. what i mean by a few hundred feet of main line sch 10 is 500 ft, including layout of pipe in an area, drilling holes for hangers into concrete, transporting pipe, greasing the ends and the gaskets, tightening the bolts, etc. you also need to look at the environment. if it's a commercial building where all the other trades are working right beside you, then i guess you're just gonna have to work around them. if you're 27 stories up in a tower i don't think you're gonna have access to a forklift...maybe a duct jack. and if it's an occupied building, then it'll take even more time and you probably CAN'T get a duct jack into the area. in that case you might wanna look at sch 10 pipe in 10' sections.
so, the process goes like this:
1. hang main lines
2. drill holes in main lines OR the main lines already have THREAD-O-LETS welded onto them IN THE SHOP
3. fit up vic fittings over holes OR thread pipes into thread-o-lets
4. if using vic branch fittings, use a vic coupling to attach the branch line
5. if using vic branch fittings, the other side of the branch line will have threads on it so you can THREAD more fittings onto it or more pipe to go where you want.
my company has already priced out this whole process for a chilled water system using sch 40 pipe. i've seen the plethora of vic fittings you can get. i've also seen the prices. and that's why you see most branches off of a main as a welded thread-o-let about the thickness of a coupling instead of a vic branch fitting.
i don't have all the answers because i don't know the situation or the codes for his particular area. i'm laying out the possible options, which is NOT what you think i did. i think you need to read my post again, not just skim over it.