I agree there's a lot of confusion about some of these terms which is why you need to go back to the written word in the design codes.
I disagree with the statement made above "MAOP, which in turn should be higher than design pressure" This is counter to what is written in e.g. ANSI B 31.4 which states "The pipe and components at any point in the pipeline shall be designed for an internal design pressure that shall not be less than the maximum steady state operating pressure at that point, or less than the static head pressure at that point with the pipeline in a static condition." [my italics]. Whilst this is what is in 31.4, most other codes have something similar.
MAOP can equal Design pressure, but should NEVER be higher than it. There seems to be a belief in many quarters that there is some sort of requirment to set MAOP 5% or 10% BELOW design pressure, but this is in my experience simply custom and practice by some operators and not manadated in any code. Providing that the test pressure was determined using the design pressure, the MAOP might initially be set lower, but can then be raised at any time up to the design pressure, but no further.
The design pressure rmeains the design pressure before, during and after installation and in nearly all circumstances remains the highest pressure that the pipeline should be able to see in normal operation (barring hydrotest).
In your second post above , first sentence did you mean to say "..head is more than MAOP..." ?? If so then I fully agree with that post. I'm sure we've all seen systems where someone has designed the piping / pipeline based on the duty point of the pump without realising that everything will trip if the flow reduces even by a few percent...
SNORGY - I've seen pump shutoff heads much higher than MOP, which is why you set the PSH and PSHH at the piping limit or below, not anything really to do with the pump due to much higher inlet pressures than "normal". This happens sometimes on start-up, especially start-up of a booster station when steady state flow is happening. Yes you need the curve, but the OP hasn't got it yet and hence just wants to see what sort of range he is looking at.
My motto: Learn something new every day
Also: There's usually a good reason why everyone does it that way