Non-Destructive Testing (NDT) Methods: RT, UT, MT, PT, VT — Which One, When?
Radiographic, ultrasonic, magnetic particle, penetrant, visual testing — how do we check a weld or part without damaging it? The five core NDT methods, what each detects, and when to choose which.
Non-Destructive Testing (NDT) is the collective name for methods that detect defects on the surface or inside a material or weld without damaging the part or impairing its usability. It is the foundation of safety in pressure vessels, pipelines, steel structures and welded fabrication: instead of cutting the part open to look, it can be inspected in place and repeatedly.
There are five core methods. None is "the best" — the right method is chosen according to the type and location of the defect and the material, and several are often used together.
1. Visual Testing (VT)
The most basic and widely used method: direct examination of surface defects with a trained eye (and aids such as a magnifier, borescope or mirror). It catches surface-breaking flaws in a weld bead such as irregularity, cracks, porosity, lack of fill and undercut. It is performed before all other methods — cheap and fast, but only sees the surface.
2. Penetrant Testing (PT)
A coloured or fluorescent liquid (penetrant) is applied so it seeps into surface-breaking cracks, then wiped off and made visible with a developer. It magnifies fine surface cracks. It also works on non-magnetic materials (stainless steel, aluminium, plastic) — preferred where MT cannot be used. It only finds surface defects.
3. Magnetic Particle Testing (MT)
The part is magnetised; surface and near-surface defects disturb the magnetic field, and magnetic particles sprinkled over the area gather along the defect to make it visible. It reaches a few millimetres below the surface. It works only on ferromagnetic materials (such as carbon steel) — not on stainless or aluminium.
4. Ultrasonic Testing (UT)
High-frequency sound waves are sent into the part; the echoes reflected from internal defects are measured to determine a defect's location and size. It detects internal (volumetric) defects — strong in thick sections and internal weld flaws. Access from a single surface is enough, with no radiation. Operator competence and calibration are critical.
5. Radiographic Testing (RT)
X-rays or gamma rays are passed through the part onto film or a digital detector; internal defects are imaged like an X-ray. It is very strong for volumetric weld flaws such as porosity, slag and lack of penetration, and leaves a permanent image record. However, it requires radiation safety (authorised personnel, licence, exclusion zone) and is sensitive to crack orientation.
Which one, when? — Quick comparison
| Method | Detects | Surface / Internal | Material limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| VT | Surface defects | Surface | None (done first of all) |
| PT | Surface-breaking cracks | Surface | None (incl. non-magnetic) |
| MT | Surface + near-surface | Surface/near-surface | Ferromagnetic only |
| UT | Internal + volumetric | Internal | Wide; calibration critical |
| RT | Internal + volumetric | Internal | Wide; radiation safety |
Rule of thumb:
- Suspected surface crack → VT + MT (if magnetic), otherwise PT
- Internal weld flaw, thick section → UT or RT
- Need a permanent image/record as evidence → RT
- On site, single-sided access, no radiation → UT
Why personnel competence matters
In NDT, the result depends as much on operator competence as on the equipment. The internationally recognised system is EN ISO 9712; personnel are certified per method as Level I / II / III:
- Level I: performs the test and records the result
- Level II: performs the test, evaluates and reports it
- Level III: writes procedures, manages the method, approves personnel
A report from personnel without a valid, level-appropriate certificate is not accepted in audits or by customers.
With ASİS UK
ASİS UK provides non-destructive testing with competent personnel and the right method selection; reports are verifiable through our digital ecosystem. To discuss the right method(s) for your needs and get a quote, reach us through the Request a Quote form — our expert will respond within 24 hours.
— ASİS UK NDT Team