Hi all,
There was a bypass loop to be added to my SWCG plumbing during initial construction. Not sure the entire reason for this, or if it's even beneficial to have, but it was recommended by a pool planner that I worked with.
In checking the plans vs the work, instead of installing the valve in-line with the main flow of water, they installed the SWCG here and placed the bypass valve in the loop next to it. This doesn't seem to make sense, as I feel the water will follow path of least resistance and the valve won't ever do anything, whether open or shut. Plumber states it's "done like this all the time".
Should I have them swap the SWCG and valve so it matches the plans, or is it irrelevant because I didn't need the valve/bypass loop to begin with?
(Red line in the picture shows the main run with the SWCG spacer installed. Green line shows the bypass loop with the valve)

There was a bypass loop to be added to my SWCG plumbing during initial construction. Not sure the entire reason for this, or if it's even beneficial to have, but it was recommended by a pool planner that I worked with.
In checking the plans vs the work, instead of installing the valve in-line with the main flow of water, they installed the SWCG here and placed the bypass valve in the loop next to it. This doesn't seem to make sense, as I feel the water will follow path of least resistance and the valve won't ever do anything, whether open or shut. Plumber states it's "done like this all the time".
Should I have them swap the SWCG and valve so it matches the plans, or is it irrelevant because I didn't need the valve/bypass loop to begin with?
(Red line in the picture shows the main run with the SWCG spacer installed. Green line shows the bypass loop with the valve)
