So why can't we just talk about the ATS in terms of optimal designs and most efficient N and P exporting algaes for folks who wan't to try one out without all of the grandiose claims and vitriol. It doesn't have to make a skimmer unecessary to be useful
It is curious what becomes emotionally charged on the boards. And the people who are most passionate when it comes to methodology tend to be the ones with no pictures in their gallery, or only pictures of gear and not of their tank!?
With respect to optimal turf filter design, this was my experience:
Higher flow rates than what Adey used worked better for me with my turf scrubber. I was cycling 10GPM through the filter for a 65G display. My notion is that high cycle rates gives the algae filter an improved opportunity to compete with algae in the tank.
My light level was relatively high compared to the PC-illuminated algae filters shown so far in this thread. I was using 250W 6500K SE at a few inches. I later switched to 150W 5000K DE in a PFO mini-pendant because it focused the light more tightly onto the filter with 100W less power. The algae you are trying to get to grow do not become limited by increased light intensity, according to Adey. My notion is that the bulk of the algae growing in the system will tend to grow where conditions are best for uptake, so I gave my filter higher flow and light levels than I did the tank.
Unlike Adey, I don't trying to model an ecosystem, and am not concerned with the diversity of plankton. I just try to grow coral, keep fish, and minimize nuisance algae in the tank. I used a skimmer and a GAC filter in parallel with the turf filter, and I made large (>50%) water exchanges a 3 or 4 times a year using NSW from Puget Sound. I kept Tridacna and Pacific stony coral and Atlantic photosynthetic gorgonians with almost no mortality using this husbandry. The plan for my next tank uses the same basic husbandry. I don't understand why people get hung up that using any kind of "natural" mediation of tank parameters is an all-or-nothing proposition. So if you use a turf filter you are required by law to throw out your skimmer? Not me.
My opinion is that you should not select a particular algae, or set or alga, for a turf filter. With live rock and sand or a diverse "seed" screen the turf community is self-selecting and will change over time as the tank conditions change. It's been stongly implied that turf algae are leaky or noxious by some posters. I don't have any evidence, but don't agree that turf algae are 'leakier" or more toxic than macroalgae. What grew in my turf filter was prefered graze for my fish, which is an indication to me that it is was not noxious. On the other hand, Caulerpa and Chaetomorpha were not prefered graze.