Hello! I built a DIY on-ground pool earlier this year complete with a waterfall, two inlets (one near the surface, and one near the bottom) and these are controlled by an EasyTouch 4 and automated valves. Temps are getting colder in the mornings here, and I was excited to see that our waterfall was on this morning for freeze protection, just as I had intended. However, I'm now concerned that I have a new potential problem with the way I've laid out my valves. Brief description with a really awful drawing:
Out of the pump, heater, SWG, the incoming line meets an automated valve (valve #1) set to actuate back and forth from 75/25 percent. One line out goes to the inlet at the surface level, and the other line out continues to valve #2. Valve #2 is set to actuate 100% to either the waterfall, or to a second inlet toward the bottom of the pool. With this combo of valves, I can use primarily the top inlet (to stir the water and catch surface debris), or send more to the bottom wall inlet (to mix up water at the bottom so I'm not simply circulating the top 1' of water, also does a great job mixing in heat when the heater is on), and finally turn on the waterfall but lower the output of the top inlet nice waterfall at low RPM. This may have been a ridiculous way to set it up, but it works great for what I was wanting to do.
Now the problem - I have valve #2 set to actuate during freeze protection, so the waterfall turns on. The top inlet has water running through it as well. However, the bottom inlet (which is on the other output of valve #2) is completely shut off, leaving a significant amount of idle water in the PVC running from the equipment pad to the pool. If we get some really cold temperatures, I'm concerned that this pipe could freeze and crack. It's worth noting that all three PVC lines coming from the equipment to their respective returns are 20+ feet long with many turns, and are above ground (under a deck)
Finally, to the question: Is it possible to setup a freeze cycle so that valve #2 will actuate (waterfall) and run for X minutes, then rotate to turn on the bottom inlet and run for X minutes, and repeat? I've seen posts where behavior like this can be done with a Pool/Spa combo, but this is Pool only.
If that's not possible, I'd love to hear what the next best option would be. Modify the valve configuration so that valve #2 will never fully turn off the bottom inlet? Wrap the pipes in insulation and hope for the best? Work out a way to drain the pipes to the waterfall during the winter so that they don't need to run?

Thanks for any advice on this!
TL;DR; - Can EasyTouch's freeze protection parameters cycle a valve on and off to keep water from freezing in two separate long PVC runs?
Out of the pump, heater, SWG, the incoming line meets an automated valve (valve #1) set to actuate back and forth from 75/25 percent. One line out goes to the inlet at the surface level, and the other line out continues to valve #2. Valve #2 is set to actuate 100% to either the waterfall, or to a second inlet toward the bottom of the pool. With this combo of valves, I can use primarily the top inlet (to stir the water and catch surface debris), or send more to the bottom wall inlet (to mix up water at the bottom so I'm not simply circulating the top 1' of water, also does a great job mixing in heat when the heater is on), and finally turn on the waterfall but lower the output of the top inlet nice waterfall at low RPM. This may have been a ridiculous way to set it up, but it works great for what I was wanting to do.
Now the problem - I have valve #2 set to actuate during freeze protection, so the waterfall turns on. The top inlet has water running through it as well. However, the bottom inlet (which is on the other output of valve #2) is completely shut off, leaving a significant amount of idle water in the PVC running from the equipment pad to the pool. If we get some really cold temperatures, I'm concerned that this pipe could freeze and crack. It's worth noting that all three PVC lines coming from the equipment to their respective returns are 20+ feet long with many turns, and are above ground (under a deck)
Finally, to the question: Is it possible to setup a freeze cycle so that valve #2 will actuate (waterfall) and run for X minutes, then rotate to turn on the bottom inlet and run for X minutes, and repeat? I've seen posts where behavior like this can be done with a Pool/Spa combo, but this is Pool only.
If that's not possible, I'd love to hear what the next best option would be. Modify the valve configuration so that valve #2 will never fully turn off the bottom inlet? Wrap the pipes in insulation and hope for the best? Work out a way to drain the pipes to the waterfall during the winter so that they don't need to run?

Thanks for any advice on this!
TL;DR; - Can EasyTouch's freeze protection parameters cycle a valve on and off to keep water from freezing in two separate long PVC runs?