unclesyd, SteveBraune, and orama-
Yup, I could've been more clear that the entire job, new steel and old, can be designed and fabricated using the old allowable stresses for simplicity.
I made the decision to hydro to 1.5x instead of 1.3x for a few reasons: The corrosion was limited to the heads only (impingement issue)so I have confidence in the shell. It avoided a longer discussion with the jurisdiction. Clearly, the heads can take it (physically identical ones did some 30 years earlier). Here's one I wouldn't have thought of in my old life working for a major Engineering and Construction outfit: The HAZOP remote contingencies (e.g. power outage + steam outage at the same time which takes some critical pump and its backup out of commission) sometimes are evaluated based on allowing the vessel to see 1.5*MAWP (the "two thirds" rule commonly seen on exchangers is directly related). Changing this vessel to 1.3x on the hydro might have impacted the HAZOP. Before people get too excited about this, let me assure you that a "design contingency" is evaluated to keep the vessel below MAWP. This would be something like a single critical pump fails, or we have a power outage. This types of situation can be reasonably expected to happen during the life of the vessel. The "remote contingency" is something, usually two or more issues acting together, which is not likely to happen, but is considered in the HAZOP.
In essence, I saw no reason to be concerned about a 1.5x hydro and there were several advantages to it.
jt