Concur with metengr on applicability, disagree on categorization of the Code Case as a 'loophole'. ASME is finally recognizing that there are other Volumetric NDT methods other than RT. RT misses much more side-wall Lack-of-Fusion than it finds. That is where 2235 gets the 'acceptable defect' table.
You find a LOT more using manual UT or Phased Array UT. Find even more [many more 'false positives'] using TOFD. On the other hand, good welders like UT because their random, scattered porosity is almost never rejectable using UT [can see the porosity in 3 dimensions, and see the actual separation of the pores]. RT 'compresses' the porosity onto a single 2-D sheet of film, and the interpretor must assume that the pores are really as close togather as the film shows.
Because of the above, I have accepted a weld using RT, and firmly rejected the same weld for multiple, stacked ares of Lack-of-Fusion. I have accepted a weld using UT, and rejected the same weld when I read the RT film due to "exessive porosity". RT is old, customary, and no longer the best choice for evaluating the quality of weld joints. But it is traditional.