Ok, I am going to assume you are referring to drill pipe because, in with drill pipe, V-150 designates a 150,000 mininum yield strength material. Generally, the manufacturers will use a modified 4130 (higher Cr and Mo) quenched and tempered tube for this. The minimum hardness expected would be around 34 HRC (321 HBW). The upper limit would be around 44 HRC (415 HBW). The expected hardness range is somewhat wide because Drill Pipe is not generally qualified thorugh hardness testing.
As far as hardenss testing method, you pretty much confined to portable methods. Brinell would be the most accurate, followed by portable Rockwell. At the bottom would be re-bound testers (Equi-Tip type). With Brinell, however, you have to grind a flat on the pipe to perform the test. As the pipe is inspected for wall thickness, this test alone can scrap the joint. With the portable Rockwell, you can generally get a good enough surface by sanding the surface to bright metal, but you can run into surface decarburization that would result in a low reading. The rebound testers also require a prepared surface. They also can be very operator-dependent, so the results are not as accurate.
So, you might not be able to do what you are wanting to do with a hardness test. That is, the methods to be used might not be accurate enough to detect the differences you are looking for.
Maybe you can go about this another way. This grade is a very specialized grade and there are only 2 or 3 manufacturers that produce it. Without knowing why you feel some of the joints are bad, it is kind of difficult, but if it is because of mixed lots, maybe a wall thickness inspection will help seperate the lots. This material is generally traceable, so if you got the traceability numbers from the joints in question, maybe the manufacturer could help.
rp