I think I understand your point Nathan. When you have a tap in the hose you either have to drag it along the floor which I can imagine is a right pain as it would surely snag, or you keep it in your hand or fix it to your belt with a holster. That would leave a loop of pole hose when working with your pole collapsed. I didnt find this too annoying (i worked with a trigger attached to my pole for seven years) and kinda got used to it. But like you say if you pick up your pole hose and carry it between houses you are not trailing it so it can't snag on anything.
Having said all that, if you fit a univalve in your pole you have no loop of hose big enough to snag on anything. It is possible to unintentionally activate the valve if you are pulling a lot of hose behind you, say micro or minibore as it can be quite heavy. however, this can be addressed by taking hold of the hose an arms length from the bottom of the pole and keeping it in your fingers as you carry your pole to the next job, this way the weight of the hose is carried by your fingers instead of pulling on the valve.
I was sceptical about it but as I've said before, I felt like a dog let of it's leash when I put a univalve in my pole. I originally combined it with exceeds tubeless kit which was good but now I prefer the simplicity of using a JG connector at the base of the pole thus
