Another MAJOR variable in your testing for the presence of Chloride SCC is the grade of Dye Penetrant used. Was it plain 'ole red dye or was it fluorescent? Many years ago, the aircraft industry established "Levels" of penetrant sensitivity; 1 thru 4. Red visible dye is about a 1/2. I would not hunt SCC with anything less than a Level 2 penetrant. My current favorite is a water-washable Level 3 that can be bought in a 12oz spray can -- ARDROX 970P25E. It will reliably find cracking 50 microns deep, or less. And for a sensitive penetrant, it is very forgiving and easy to work with. The old ZYGLO Level 3 and 4 penetrants were extremely hard clean off, and get a 'readable' background. [too much residual dye and you cannot see the indications from real flaws]. One major problem with fluorescent penetrants of any sensitivity Level -- red dye quenches the glow of fluorescent dye. If the part has had any red dye on it, fluorescent cannot be used until the red is burned out [think 800°F or possibly even higher]. I got good results on a Rx head that had run at 900-1200°F for over a month, after being drenched in red dye. YMMV.
Theoretically, you can sand off the cracks. At the incipient stage, where they are just visible with a Level 3 dye, they are less than 1 mil deep; easy to 'buff' off. I would buff out the cracks on your line that are visible, or findable with plain red dye. This will buy you some time. And then start fabbing a P22 line to replace your 'problem child'.