Wow! That MPV really adds a lot of loss....I’m shocked it’s so high.
Brandon,
One benefit of running an oversized Quad filter for me is that I never backwash the filter. I simply open it up and clean it out twice per year. I have a simple plunger style backwash valve but the honest truth is it is practically useless. In fact, last season it started leaking because the o-rings needed replacement and I thought to my myself that it was such a waste of time and a headache that I should just replumb the pad and ditch the valve. There are many people here that plumb a QuadDE like a cartridge filter with no backwash valve at all. I don’t know how your Quad60 will fair over time with its loading frequency but, if you can live without backwashing, then ditching the MPV altogether might be a viable alternative. In reality, backwashing does a very poor job of cleaning out a filter and it’s always better to fully clean it out and add the exact right quantity of DE as oppose to trying to guess how much DE was sent out the backwash line (it’s less than half).
You may just need to run the pool for a while to figure out how best to work it. You may be able to live with what you have in the setup. Time will tell you what really needs fixing.....
Oh, and about that bonding TEE, I’m not sure it’s useful at all. If the pool was constructed properly and the rebar in the shell was bonded correctly, then there’s no need for an additional water bond. PB’s seem to do the strangest things nowadays with water bonds and zinc anodes, stuff that flies in the face of good science and engineering. It’s not going to harm anything being there (unless there’s some hunk of metal in that TEE slowly corroding away) but it’s not really useful either.