im a big fan of coil denitrators over most alternatives, Id like to think that my being a fan is based on both personal experience and the research ive done on/with them. hopefully its not to based on my experience alone. I dont build them for others, I dont sell them, I just like removing nitrate by any means other than waterchanges. there acually are better methods, but some are very cost prohibitive and most both IME and in research require more maintanence. as a single example there is one used by food fish farmers that uses electrical plates it removes all nitrogen in any form in a single pass, though those plates need power, and the evaporation is increased dramatically, and normal replacement parts need to be on hand ..... it becomes less in the interest of a small time breeder (im guessing here but id say that as fish breeders every single ornamental breeder either the guy in the garage like me or the nice people at ORA are a small scale breeder compared to many food fish farmers)
now after kinda putting my point of view out there, the bucket full of sand aproach has been done before, and along with its advantages it has some disadvantages, one of which is it will create fine pathways or channels that the water will travel thru and this will cause the bed to crash, eventually. there are some work arounds and replacing the sand from my recollection is the best followed by mechanical stirring(memory of broken units pops to my head). I dont know that it needs to be done yearly or not, and ill guess that like many things it depends on things that are hard to compare like the quality of the input water, input rate, size of the chamber .....
now after stating that it might work well for a very long time in a fish breeding setup, but I like the coil still, as for it always cloging thats not really true, its close, but not really true, if the feed rate is high enough and a bio chamber is used, the chances of input tube cloging are significantly reduced, and to some point eleminated. ive been using a coil on a single tank without any maintenence for about 4 years now, though the bio load is nothing like a SW breeding setup, its a 55g FW tank with a handfull of platties

its still running, and has been just fine.
as for cycling them you still have to cycle them, but it wont take as long and you dont actually have to do anything, just expect a short period of time before they start working.