Clamps with 'liners' like that to provide a pseudo- continuous inner face are strongly preferred for silicone hose, which is easily cut. Many variations exist.
The nut torque is also typically limited to 50 in-lb or less for the typical 1/4-28 t-bolt thread regardless of clamp size because even a lined clamp is capable of cutting even reinforced hose and/or distorting the underlying tube, given the mechanical advantage provided by the t-bolt thread.
In the marine exhaust trade, similar clamps are used on hot/wet/gas and water lines at pressures that rarely go above 25 psig, but they are always doubled (two adjacent with 1/2" between), and usually tripled for hoses much fatter than your arm.
Presence of a 'hose bead' on the tube is also pretty much mandatory, unless some other means is provided to prevent the hose from oozing off the tube end under pressure.
When you get to ~100 psig, you generally need a hose bead and a full circle crimped ferrule.
... Okay, it used to be common to see R12 systems with hose clamps, but the tubes had multiple barbs or multiple beads, and you had to be careful not to overtorque the clamps. ... and ~nobody does it that way anymore; full crimps and quick-connects are faster and more reliable and less skill-sensitive.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA