@rjack321
Not to be facetious but, why someone is surprised when a crack appears after hydro amazes me.
Hydro stretches the tank, so much the the tank never returns to its pre hydro dimensions. So if there is a defect the hydro us just going to make it worse.
All Aluminum tanks IMO should be eddy current inspected ( with steel it gets more complicated, it can be done though)
Visual can't be used to confirm and eddy current detection at eddy current is able to find defects that the eye can't
The visual plus Eddy current tester is a piece of crap and is best used as a door stop.
Clearly the people who devise the testing procedures and frequency of scuba tanks are fools ad don't understand the science.
6351 tanks are perfectly safe if subjected to a proper inspection method. After all you all fly in aircraft that are inspected for cracks, and indeed fly with cracks that are within an allowable limit.
I think the reason for the "surprise" is that the hydro test itself could make a crack where none existed before. People are conditioned to think of a tank which passes hydro as safe and that's not necessarily the case. And having a hydro crack a tank is definitely not SLC since the test itself is quite short.
I have no idea how you define "perfectly" safe. NOTHING is perfectly safe. The risk from 6351 cylinders is rather low statistically speaking, but its not zero. Still poor consolation to the family of an employee who was killed by a "rare" explosion.