So am I right in thinking that the lazyman process seems to work fine and the upsides are
1] you don't need to titrate
2] you are almost guaranteed a 27/3 pass in one stage
That's the plan, though I think it's good to have a rough idea of the oil's titration so the catalyst overdose isn't too massive.
but the downsides are
1] You have to spend extra time/money ensuring your oil is completely dry
2] Your yield is lower
3] You make more soap
4] you end up with more glyc to dispose of and it's rock hard
1] yes definitely - for my 125l batch I might use roughly an extra 4kWh to make sure it's toasty dry, which is somewhere between £0.50 to £1.00 depending on your tarrif (0.4-0.8 pence per litre). Although it consumes more time to do this, it's not hands on time, in keeping with the "lazy" part of the process

2] apparently it should be lower yeild though I've not done enough batches with a good 25% overdose to really judge this
3] I've not noticed extra soap yet but I'm waiting on settling to see
4] 24h after completing the batch the glyc was still liquid, though usually after WBD all of my glyc sets solid eventually. I'll check again next time I'm out both on the soap settling progress and the glyc solidity.
The way I look at it, the primary production cost is Methanol, which I'm recovering, so the cost of that part of the process won't change.
Sodium Hydroxide is about £25 per 25kg bag, and I'm using 200g over what I normally would (20 pence extra per batch or 0.16ppl).
So I'd say I'd be paying about 0.6 to 1ppl extra by this process, or 75p-£1.25 per 125l batch for the privilege of less effort.
I suppose I could mix up loads of Methoxide in advance since the same amount of catalyst would be used each time, that'd make life a little easier too.