Be careful, as "sound engineering practice" has bitten my own hind end on more than one occasion. This is like one's watch: everyone has one, they all differ, and each engineer believes his own. It can be a code word for, "Do as you please-I don't care to specify what I want- but if I don't like something after the fact it's you that I'll blame, Mr. Engineer!". I would imagine that the same applies to any regulatory body who utters those words in statute.
When faced with a variety of watches that don't agree, you go to the international standard clock, right? The same with engineering judgment. That's where codes and standards come in very handy- in defining a minimum standard of care that at least a majority agree with. Useful, if not taken as if they were some religious text and used as an excuse not to do engineering.
Air at 7 barg is category D (low hazard) service per B31.3, is it not? If so, design fabricate and test in accordance with the requirements of that standard for that service. If it is category D, much of the testing becomes the owners' discretion. If you're doing butt welding, I don't remember off hand if radiography is a mandatory requirement in category D service, or not. Go look it up: if it isn't, some sugaring and discolouration on the root pass is probably not going to matter much to the soundness of the weld itself as long as the proper preparation between passes is done. If spot random radiography IS still required either by code or owner, then you've little choice but to purge the root, as costly and time-consuming as that may be.
Then again, the client is using stainless steel for some reason, and any sugaring and heat tint on the ID may or may not affect the cleanliness or chemical reasistance which was the reason stainless was selected- or was it merely selected to avoid external painting?
Sorry, I'm not familiar with your terminology. Does 50NB mean 2"NPS? If so, you'd be socket-welding and internal purging is NOT mandatory. If the service is truly air, consider using a non-welded system like Victaulic Press-Fit. Could save a huge amount of time and money, especially if the piping is long runs in a plant environment with few fittings.