I really don't like unnecessary check valves. I can't tell you how many washes I've been in where they had a problem somewhere, so their solution was to add a check valve. Tire cleaner coming back through the air line and weeping out the regulator? Don't bother adjusting the air pressure up where it should be, just add a check valve before the regulator and watch the lines blow when a check valve at the boom fails. Spot free tank contaminated? Don't bother checking the ones in the bay, just add one at the tank so the service cap on your Procon pump swells like a loaf of bread baking and it no longer works. Adding check valves when there's a problem doesn't solve the problem, it just masks it and adds yet another failure point.
If the wash has tanks for
soap, wax, and hot water, with a city pressure rinse solenoid for cold, I either use one check valve with
soap, wax and hot water behind it, or I use one just on hot water and turn the
soap and wax solenoids around so they act as their own check valves. If you both decide a check valve on the high pressure line is necessary, I'd put it at the pump and not the boom, and I'd use at least one size larger than the pipe fittings.