Thanks on the bending Mark, i've gone with fittings having discovered for myself the limits of springs.
My suspicion is that it's probably possible to get a problem with push fit fittings as a result of bad assembly - e.g. as a result of not pushing it fully home.
I wonder how they do too if a 90 deg change in pipe direction means that expansion and contraction result in regular twisting of the joint.
That said a quick calculation suggests that 30psi pressure in a 1/2in pipe will produce an axial pull of about 6lbs which should do them up tight. (?)
10bar is almost 150psi Mark - that's a lot of pressure, but on the other hand the stuff is apparently certified to be OK to a max of this on cold water.
The various Agrement boards have it as certified up to 50 years life too on cold water, but reducing fairly rapidly with increasing temperature - so that it's only OK for short exposures to 100 deg C.
Solder fittings can leak too if the soldering technique is not good, and compression fittings due to assembly errors.
It'd be interesting to know if there are real cases of proven failures out there on correctly installed systems that where there were no manufacturing faults - if the horror stories are backed by fact.
Despite all the elder lemon 'experts' in the business (it's instructive to look up a plumbing forum on something simple like how to do up a compression fitting - every answer is different) when i see what the trade gets up to in practice with compression fittings (e.g. mixing metric and imperial pipe and fittings) it's a minor miracle that every house in the country isn't knee deep in water.
My suspicion is that they are not because basically all of the systems not only work, but are highly resistant to variations in technique....