I agree with moltenmetal and others that a hydrotest should always be preferred unless there are good reasons not to do so - there may well be.
In 1995 there was an incident in a british construction yard where three workers were killed during a nitrogen pressure test. Here's the story as I have heard it.
The project was an offshore topside gas facility.
The pipe to be pressure tested was an 18" gas line - in order avoid wetted piping, reasons were good to use nitrogen for pressure testing instead of performing a hydrotest. For bolted joints, Grayloc type clamp fittings were used.
Somewhere on that line a valve or something had been temporarily removed during the test and the line was blinded off with a blind hub and a Grayloc clamp. A couple of meters upstream of that line there was a check valve and further upstream was the pressure indicator used for the hydrotest. The check valve was not removed as nitrogen was being filled from the upstream side, however with the line being blinded off downstream there was a considerable volume trapped between the check valve and the blind hub.
The pressure test was performed, the system was depressurized using the PI, but because the PI was located upstream the check valve the trapped volume remained pressurized to some 180 barg (2610psig) without anybody noticing it.
The workers went back to reassemble the removed valve. First unbolting the clamp - it stuck so nothing happened.
The poor guy then hit the clamp with a hammer to it loosen it and that was the end for him and to of his colleagues.
The nearest guy virtually dissapeared as he was blown to pieces.
It must be said that my information is second hand as I have it from several colleagues or ex colleagues who at the time worked for the company that designed the module. All I could find during a google search was this:
One can argue that this incident was due to human error, but it surely demonstrates that pneumatic pressure testing should be done only with extremely high safety precautions.
Safety cost money, so if there are not very good reasons for using air or nitrogen - use liquid.
Whenever we do pneumatic testing - e.g. for instrument air, nitrogen (much smaller pipes and lower pressure) - we have to evacuate the whole area etc etc. during the test. This is a legal requirement.
Just my comment
Regards
Mogens
.