milan khatri, kind of an open-ended question, depends on, among other things, class of work, shop practice and preference, weld details, external loadings, etc.
Repads are difficult on heads and usually avoided. If a moderate nozzle thickness increase provides the needed reinforcement, that is usually least cost. However some thick schedules may be hard or impossible to get. Avoiding unneeded welding is always preferred.
Some classes of work may require integral reinforcement, so that a thick pipe or forged nozzle is required. For a short cylinder such as a heat exchanger channel it might make sense to increase the cylinder thickness rather than add a pad.
Nozzle reinforcement is one aspect of strength. If nozzle loads are present, even an otherwise acceptable integrally reinforced nozzle may need a pad or thicker shell.
A lot of the time though it makes sense to just add a pad on a cylinder.
Regards,
Mike
The problem with sloppy work is that the supply FAR EXCEEDS the demand