"Roxanne42": I work in a contract lab. Sounds like you have a standard Agilent 1100-series Binary Pump. These are designed to use either TWO bottles or FOUR bottles (w/optional add on valve) to select one bottle from each 'side' only. They do not allow full random access of the solvent bottles. Agilent's Quaternary Pump offers full random access to all four bottles and includes the degasser module (extra on the Binary Pump) as well. We have found that most chromatographer's are better off only buying the Quat pump and not the binary. The QUAT pump has ~ 900ul delay volume, full access to any bottle or combination of bottle, excellent flow stability from 100ul to 10.00 ml/min (the binary only goes to 5 ml max) and is less expensive. BTW: I do not work for Agilent, but have spent a great deal of time testing the Binary and Quaternary pumps in our labs. Buy Quat pumps ! If you need more than four solvents, then 1) do as it was suggested to us by another company, add another quat pump to your 1100 and you will gain four more solvent choices or 2) buy an inexpensive solvent selector valve (low pressure valve such as the one offered by Hamilton or Agilent) which connects to one of your bottle lines (in your case the second pump head) and goes to a ten or twelve port valve for solvent selection. Keep in mind that these cheap low pressure valves will require that you flush each bottle line out before use and will add a delay in time to gradient runs as they are not routed directly to the pump head (must go to the valve first).
As for the HPLC column selectors, we use several in our labs. I do not know why people state the Chiralizer products are expensive as they are actually less expensive than all of the ones I know about (Rheodyne, which makes them for Agilent, Phenomenex and many other companies/PE/Valco). One of the basic Chiralizer units we have holds up to five columns and one pre-plumbed by-pass line and cost just over $3K (agilent version is ~ $6K). They also make versions which hold up to ten columns and have temperature controlled versions (we have one of those as well) which are expensive, but work great. I think that the people who said they "are expensive" must have been comparing the wrong models together (e.g. Chiralizer heated/cooled verisons to the ambient temperature models made by other companies such as Rheodyne/Agilent). *Always check the source of your info... it may come from a sales person ! HPLC Column selectors save time, increase productivity and accuracy plus some offer software interfaces which control them under your existing HPLC software (We use Chemstation as well as other types of software with the Chiralizer brand LC Spiderling column selectors are all controlled under the same software. Very easy to use). *I sound like an advertisment, but that is because we would not want to be w/o them.