What is your recommendation for inspecting SLCs in suspect 6351 tanks?
SLC is nothing special (well the mechanism is) the result is just a tight fatigue crack in the bore of a hole. It's not difficult like say trying to find a 015" crack under a rivet head in the 3rd layer down.
If it were me, I'd be running a rotary Eddy Current test. Probe in, out and done, should take 10 seconds or less. It's only Aluminum, so either a 500 KHz or 1 MHz probe.
I haven't taught the theory since 2000, so I might be slightly rusty on the fine details (can't remember filter setting off the top of my head - but most bits of kit have default starter settings).
Rotary Eddy Current is fast and repeatable - we used to have an automated machine that would examine each drilled hole in a wing spar (because doing it manually would be very dull) a simple gated alarm on the signal and hey presto. I've walk down the flight line (on a cold windy night) doing bolt hole inspections on 767 wing pylons. No drama 1 min per pylon. If you got a fault indication then you'd identify location and depth for them to open the hole up and hopefully remove the defect before you re scanned.
The reason the Vis plus is useless is because it's cheap. It has poor signal processing, crappy filters and awful software code. Thats why its rotary probe runs at a few 100 RPM not 5000-6000. It's too small to be a door stop and not heavy enough to hurt if you throw it at someone. It's pointless.
Assuming a decent eddy current tester is out of reach (financially) I'd use a hand held probe. Place the tank on it's side and roll it along a bench 1 complete turn resting the probe on the threads. Move the probe in 0.020" and repeat
As long as you have a written procedure to follow (unless you have a Level II or III certified engineer) it's not hard. The equipment settings should allow an easy display or a signal showing the difference between cracks and mechanical damage, care needs to be taken in case there is small corrosion pits which can cause a different signal response or you can get a compound response (corrosion and crack or score)
It all depends on how many tanks you're inspecting as to your investment.
There's also no rational reason why you can't carry out an Eddy current check on all Ali tanks (non 6351) Ignore the BS about false positives - that's down to the vis plus being junk.
Ali is Ali in that apart from a few instances the alloys all have the same conductivity (Eddy current speaking) so the test settings and procedure would remain the same.
Ali cladding and having been subjected to excess heat will cause issues - but if you get a weird reading you reject because it's clearly not right
Steel on the other hand isn't you get huge variances between different alloys having differing magnetic influences along with heat treatments and different coatings such as Cad plate or galvanising all having influences.
With steel you have a test block that is of the same alloy, same heat treatments and same surface treatments as a baseline reference for setup