There seems to be incorrect information out there about strict alignment requesting more strict checking. Strict vs relaxed alignment is just about the domain being able to send mail from subdomains without extra DNS records on the subdomains (relaxed) or not (strict). The envelope from (for SPF) and d= domain (for DKIM) must match the DNS records used. If you don't use SPF for DMARC you don't use SPF for DMARC and it doesn't matter if the DMARC SPF alignment is strict or relaxed (there is no way in DMARC to require both DKIM and SPF to pass). It is still a good idea to always pass plain (non-aligned) SPF (just based on envelope from) since sometimes this is checked independently from DMARC.
I am slightly confused, and perhaps misunderstanding your framing.
I do use DMARC and SPF in the fashion you described. In my environments I typically need to take every measure to ensure only authorized services/servers/senders are sending, via authorized hosts and IPs, and this often changes based on subdomain, so that’s why I use strict alignment. Personally I strive to keep various services strictly separated by (sub)domain.
I thought it might just be ambiguous language. It wasn't clear to me what you were trying to say and it could be read as implying what I have seen (incorrectly) stated in some DMARC descriptions elsewhere. Just trying to prevent any misunderstandings from anyone reading the thread and improve my own understading by checking that I got it right before posting. Thanks for clarifying what you ment :).