You are soldering copper pipe the right way, in my opinion, with silver solder. And never fail to employ the correct flux. Since I worked my way through college as a boilermaker and was trained as welder, I do my own soldering at home and for friends when I have a chance.
I would never accept a so-called solder joint done without the correct flux. The metals simple won't bond thoroughly due to a dirty amalgam surface. For a strong and dependable joint joint, you must insure complete cleanliness and pure, clean metal finish. Flux does this while the joint is being formed. Nothing else, in my experience will match this method for soldering strenth.
I used to do my own soldering in my plants because it has become rare to find experienced solders anymore. My personal soldering has been done on cryogenic equipment and coldbox piping. My joints were routinely tested to 5,000 psig on copper piping up to 1" size.