what type of material and gas are you running
also how does the porosity look is it in a line for a section of the weld or just in one spot?, near stops starts?
guessing that you are using a common wire size it appears that you are running low, 19.6 v and 160 amps is generally short circuit on all but the thinnest wires. Also if you're welding indoors 30-35 CFH of gas seems a bit excessive, shouldn't need to go much over 20-25 if even that.
it's hard to say without looking at the x-rays and welds myself.
If it's coming in clusters it might be due to an issue like cleanliness of the pipe, perhaps even oil on the wire (although that's usually rare in MIG) IF it's in a line or all throughout the welds that indicates something is going on with the welding process like bad or contaminated gas, leaky hose etc. Finally if it's around starts or stops (which are going to be hard to remember on piping) it might be from bad technique or maybe your MIG machine doesn't prepurge long enough? OR you aren't cutting off your stubbies. Million different things
Those are a couple guesses I would give, again without looking at the pipe myself. Also for future reference I was scratching my head when you said your wire feed was at 3 IPM I'm guessing the machine has a face plate that goes 0-10? because generally wire feed speed is in the range of several hunder IPM so for future you can time yourself letting out wire for 10 seconds and multiply that by 6 to get your real WFS. It's what I did when I used to write GMAW procedures.