I'm talking about what is often called a PDWA valve found on late Australian cars - looks like this:

I've just read through the description of that unit you provided the link for, and it is different to the one I have experience with. At the bottom it says '5 port type of this on Australian cars is no longer available' - that's the one I'm used to. Have a look at the two links below:
Late Australian TypeUK TypeTo clear things up, the Australian ones (and the UK ones too, I imagine) are not true PDWA valves. PDWA stands for Pressure Differential Warning Actuator, and they are used where a dual circuit system is used, and compares the pressure of each circuit. If one circuit drops in pressure, they can activate a light on the dash. On late Australian minis, this was the 'Brake Fail' light found on the dash. The valves here do not do that - there is no sensor or wire that runs to the dashboard. There was a PDWA valve fitted to late Australian models, but this valve is not it - the PDWA valve was integrated into the late dual-circuit master cylinders, and most have seized up and stopped working by now. You cvan tel a valve is not a PDWA valve if it has no electric plug or wires - it can't give a warning without those!
If yours is not a 5-port valve, then the info I provided before may not be 100%, so sorry if that has caused an confusion. But if this operates anything like the 5-way one, the valve does nothing for the front brakes, and only limits the pressure that can be applied to the rear brakes. I have heard that the valves bolted to the rear subframe do work as an alternative, but for the Australian models using the valve is easier, as the valve also acts as a splitter. If you have the 4-port valve, I don't know of any reason it would be better than the rear subframe version.