Well explain the humor. Please enlighten me. What are we missing that you know. Instead of ridicule, how about educating us.
You still have the same volume of air if your low-high setpoints are 110-145 or whether they are 140-175. There is still 35psig differential of air worth in the tank, which works out to be the same amount of standard cubic feet no matter what the pressure comparison. If you use the ideal gas law (pretty basic PV=nRT) you can easily find this out or do your own calculations, i have done them many times in the past for people.
There are 2 things which will increase your "playing" capacity of air that you have:
1) If you have a larger reservoir/tank
2) If you adjust your high and low set points to be further away from each other which is only available with Airlift i believe and not Accuair setups
I would not recommend going with number 2 unless you really have the compressors to match the total airflow and duty requirements. You can put a lot more undue stress/strain on the compressors by having them operate for a long time or to a higher pressure than typical.
150 psi traps are usually polycarbonate. It will shatter or the bowl can launch.
Polycarbonate is an industrial standard for airline equipment, the typical that is stocked by airride suppliers have metallic bowls, usually aluminum. The o-rings will unseat before any bowls start shattering and you will get leaking problems.
OP, i would recommend not running the full 200psig just as a friendly recommendation. There is no need for a reservoir to have that much air unless you want to replace your compressors more often or you want that extra fraction of a fraction of a second faster lift speed.
And as for you original question, check out Ackland Grainger for these products!
3/8" Version:
https://www.grainger.com/product/SPEEDAIRE-250-psi-Compact-Compressed-4ZL29
1/4" Version:
https://www.grainger.com/product/SPEEDAIRE-250-psi-Compact-Compressed-4ZL27