Just because D1.1 thinks that UT suddenly goes blind at 5/16" thickness is a poor reason to refuse to use it to confirm the quality of your T-K-Y welds. UT is used on the fab welds of all offshore tubular drilling platforms. The industry started doing this when using D1.1 "exactly" [older ed., did not specifically address T-K-Y] allowed a couple of disasters to occur.
Yes, if you use the 5/8 x 3/4" 2.25 MHz "AWS" transducer, you cannot get decent results even on 3/8" flat plate. If a 3/8 or 1/4" round 5.0 MHz 'ducer is used, with an ASME-style DAC curve, I can now 'see' what needs to be seen. Come look over my shoulder anytime. I can prove my assertions.
As gtaw alludes to, waiting to perform MT/PT on a cold carbon steel weld root is a leading cause of root cracking. Don't do it - period. If T-K-Y joints are handled like regular open-root pipe welds, your problems are reduced to "damn few".
Bevel & fit-up is visually inspected AND SIGNED FOR by an experienced welding inspector [NOT the production foreman]
Preheat verification with a pyrometer is mandatory, overseen by a roving weld inspector.
All 'new' welders are 100% volumetrically inspected [UT in this case - geometry won't allow RT] for their first month
After 1-2 'cutouts' or 2-5 minor weld repairs per year, the offending welder is dismissed/demoted.
The welding inspector cannot be overridden by Production or Engineering [unless the engr. is also an experienced welding inspector, qualified to evaluate NDT reports, and WILLING TO SIGN THE ACCEPTANCE.
It is so simple that it is hard.
Very good-to-excellent welders make very good-to-excellent welds, especially with welding inspectors to 'keep them honest'. Cheap, inexperienced welders and a welding inspector that sleeps in his chair or will 'knuckle under' to Production will guarantee a significant quantity of serious weld defects. These cold facts have been documented for 60+ years in ASME boiler and vessel shops. It's simple.