OTM-Options,
Nobody will agree with you. It would be foolish to do so.
Using market orders exposes you to the risk of an NBBO trade-through, or a Clearly Erroneous Execution due to a sudden liquidity vacuum as per Occam's example. It is highly unlikely that you will receive a trade-through execution with a limit order, unless you do so purposely by using an ISO.
The fact that nobody on this forum has been unlucky enough to suffer this disaster recently enough to provide you with an actual example pulled from Time & Sales means nothing. The internet is filled with verifiable examples of horrific fills resulting from the the poor use of market orders.
If you insist on using market orders in volatile markets, at least exercise your ability to apply a cap or floor to the execution price at a defined percentage away from the NBBO. In fact, many brokers will apply this filter to your market order automatically, without your consent, in order to protect your capital and to reduce the risk that you will leave your broker stuck with a deficit that they have to cover.
InfoTech ........ Your post is mostly copy/paste from Interactive Brokers so called "Knowledge Base", and perhaps other brokers as well. IB's Handling of Market Orders
RE: "The internet is filled with verifiable examples of horrific fills resulting from the the poor use of market orders."
I prefer to debate with someone who has real market experience. Post your own experiences, not what you read on the internet. If you are going to reference info from other websites post a link and let me read it - I will not rely on your interpretation of such material.
