The only water brake I have ever seen inside, (which was not a Land and Sea unit), had straight radial vanes inside the casing end plates that had similar dimensions to the straight radial vanes on either side of the rotor. The only difference being the number of vanes.
If both rotor and casing had the same number of vanes, all the vanes edges would pass each other simultaneously, potentially causing a massive torsional vibration problem. It would probably shake itself to pieces very quickly. So the outer casing end plates will have either an additional vane, or one less vane than the rotor. That will then create a far smoother more constant torque load.
The water flow control valve interests me too. I am assuming this is a normal commercial motorised gate valve of some description ?
The recommended water flow sounds about right, I used British imperial gallons and degrees Celsius in my previous post. Flow measured in US gallons and Fahrenheit will cool the dyno just as well, hehehe.