A general observation.
Many people who very helpfully respond to posts regarding piping have backgrounds that are typically central generating stations, petro-chem, refinery, offshore platforms, etc. Plants falling into this catagory are the "big leagues" of piping. Many, if not most of the people posing the questions and/or reading the responses, are from general industrial backgrounds, and have never, and will likely never, see a forged steel screwed pipe fitting. These plants are full of 150 & 300 malleable, 125 & 250 cast iron fittings, and sch 40 or 80 pipe thats A53B ERW at best, and very commonly A53F (which I understand has largely gone out of production - much rejoicing...). These plants don't have specialized piping engineering departments, or even AN engineering department. More and more, they don't even have an engineer dedicated full time to their plant. Lots of companies have an engineer covering projects spanning all disciplines looking after 2 or 3 plants. Most of these plants no longer have "pipe shops", either. Just understaffed maintenance shops with electricians and millwrights, and the line between them gets more and more blurred as well. For most applications in general industry, the fittings listed in B16.11 are serious overkill, as is sch 160 pipe.
I've worked in plants ranging from a little low-pressure steam heating plant to a 2000 MW central station, and lots in between. What makes perfect sense in one particular type of plant, is often just plain nuts for monetary or code/technical reasons, in another type of plant.
Whether you're somebody who does piping as your full-time gig in the big plants, or someone who's range of duties include pipe in general industry, and hasn't got the budget to buy or time to plow through a series of ASME code books, the "Piping Handbook" by Nayyar is probably the best single engineering book on piping I know of. Put a copy on your shelf. The answer to most of your piping questions are in there somewhere.