Try this: You're obviously facing short-sighted (economically driven) pressure to get the rig built, and to NOT replace the piping.
So,
1) Remove the pipe that has burst. Unbolt the flanges and fittings (it will be less expensive than rebiulding the pieces). Pull it out of the racks and overheads and put the pieces 9each spool) on the deck. Put blanks on each section - leave the long welded sections in the rack only if you have too. Hydro each section. As more and more break - if they break - demand your money back plus damages plus cost of testing plus delay time.
2) Use the separated spools as templates for the replacement sections: Weld brackets (dead or dummy flanges temporarily attached to the deck or brackets) at each flanged end of each spool. From each of these dead flanges, rebuild the replacement spools back towards the template at the other end - that way, the replacement spools will fit the original location with little problem.
As you find out how many spool sections are breaking, you can begin to identify the limits of your problem. Use NDE properly: to verify the fabrication welds at fittings and flanges, not to check the full length resistance welds down every length of pipe. Field NDE isn't accurate enough to do that job. Field welding isn't accurate enough (economical enough and fast enough) to rebuild pipe lengthwise welds.
Right now, all you have is a deathtrap of unknown pressure rating.