After completely ruining a perfectly good 100W tube

First, the water flow switch. I have read in this forum that the water flow switch can be fitted to the LPSU or to the Controller. I have a solenoid based Water flow switch, so only 2 wires. My question is, which method will give the best protection. I understand how to connect to the LPSU, but I am not so sure about the Controller. Is it simply a matter of 1 wire to one of the IN1 to IN 6 and the other to ground (and the software part as well)? Do the inputs work differently? Why would I use the Controller over the LPSU or vice versa?
Now the Air assist switch. Again it is a solenoid based switch.
A lot of my cutting will be small pieces and I have the knife type of cutting table. It is not possible to easily replace the knives with a honeycomb bed or I would go that way. with the small amount of cutting I was able to do before blowing my tube, I found that the air assist tended to tilt a number of the smaller pieces after cutting, so that, when the cutting head moved around, it would sometimes catch on one of the tilted pieces and drag the whole work piece with it.
I should add here that my cutter allows only a very small gap between the tip of the cutting head and the work piece when properly focused. Perhaps 4-5mm.
What I want to be able to do, if possible, is to shut off the air assist when a cut is finished and leave it of while the head travels to the next cutting point, then turn the air back on. Sometime this will be a very short amount of time.
Is it even possible to accomplish this? I use a compressor, so I am expecting that the air shut off should be as fast as the electronics will allow. Will that be fast enough to achieve my goal?
If anyone has experience in this area, I would very much appreciate your input.
While I wait for my new tube to arrive, I am fitting a sheet of aluminium (yes, I am in Australia) fly mesh across the knife table. The main problem with this seems to be that fly mesh comes in rolls and is very hard to flatten again, so it tends to want to lift the cutting sheet to some extent. I have yet to come up with a successful method of holding the mesh down. I could use weights on the work piece, but without a Red Dot Pointer, it is hard to be sure of keeping the weights away from the Cutting head.
Thank you all for taking the time to read this post. Hopefully one of you will be able to offer some answers.
The 100W tube that broke was made in 2001. Yes, 2001 and was still cutting beautifully (after I worked out how to focus it properly). I have added a photo of the label to verify this. Unfortunately I can only afford to replace it with a RECI tube, so it won't be 14 years before I need to replace the RECI.
Regards,
Albert