Just a couple of thoughts and observations...
In the first few Astras the nosewheel squat switch had to be on the ground to be able to deploy the T/Rs. That was later removed and now they are capable of being deployed in flight. I flew an early G200 (Galaxy) and they also required the nosewheel squat switch to be on the ground - which made for some interesting moments if the guy in the right seat didn't hold forward pressure on the yoke during the initial portion of the rollout. (The T/Rs would deploy, then stow as the weight came off the nosewheel, then deploy again, then stow, then deploy...) They were talking about coming out with a service bulletin to move the T/R switch from the nosewheel to one of the main gears, but I havent flown a G200 for a few years and I don't know if it was ever done.
For us Part 91 (and 135) types, the AFM is pretty specific when it comes to the procedures and limitations on T/R usage. Stick with those and you won't run into many problems. Where you can run into problems is when pilots start to be "creative" in their thinking. If you are ever involved in a runway accident or incident and if you are using any techniques outside of those contained in the AFM you will end up having to explain to a fed and probably your insurance underwriter why your techniques are superior those contained in the AFM (and provide them with all of the supporting engineering and flight test data).
Remember the basics - T/Rs don't stop airplanes, brakes stop airplanes. T/Rs are more effective at high speeds, their effectiveness diminishes as your speed decreases. (I always thought T/Rs were a waste of money on 500 series Citations - by the time you got them deployed you were about ready to turn off of the runway. But they sure look cool.)
I've been flying jets for a long time and I can't honestly think of one instance where having the T/Rs made the operation safer or more "doable".
Personally, I'll deploy them, but I seldom if ever, get into them much beyond idle-deploy - it makes too much noise and rattles the back end of the airplane too much for my liking. So much for my personal technique.
LS