could you please try and take a more positive approach, Rupert?
a judge is supposed to look at both positive and negative before judging
you seem to go digging for possible faults while omitting to try and solve them.
and you seem not to have understood at all how this system works.
The key item is the solids settling tank.
there are two ways to remove the solids: through the bottom or over the rim of the fish tank
I propose to do this over the rim, as you have to pump up the water anyway to the upper NFT (if in an NFT system)
Same goes for any system, whether NFT or not: you have to pump the water to the highest point in your setup.
The drawing shows an NFT system since that is the subject of this thread, but I can easily adapt it for any other setup.
The solids are taking a free ride with the water if the speed is adequate:
solids are not lifted by anything else but the water speed in the standing pipe
That goes for any system
So the pump flow and the pipe dimensioning must ensure this
that goes for any system
so you must choose a pump that ensures adequate flow and dimension your pipe so this flow is transposed in adequate speed
that goes for any system, tank on the ground, tank lifted up, or tank buried. Pump in tank, pump outside tank, you name it.
I prefer above ground tanks for several reasons:
1. it allows you to take the pump out of the tank
2. it allows you to work in an overflow system
this guarantees constant water level for the fish
this eliminates the risk of the tank draining or overflowing in case anything goes wrong
if well designed it also completely eliminates the risk of the growbed overflowing in case anything goes wrong
3. all parts of the system are readily accessible, most are at working height.
4. the pump only pumps clean, filtered water.
aeration for the fish:
At normal densities for AP, aeration obtained by the flow of a pump of minimal design can be expected to be adequate, especially if the water flows sideways into the tank as shown on the drawing. This will create an eddy, with the extra advantage of gathering the solids in the bottom center of the tank for faster removal.
If you would wish to further enhance this removal of solids, just take the inflowing pipe back to the bottom of the tank and have the inflow there.
If you do this, don't forget to put an open tee on the top part of the pump exit pipe else you will create a siphon when the pump is stopped.
You can also divide the flow between an upper and a lower exit.
Coming to think of it, this system allows for much higher densities thanks to the solids settling tank and worm bin (fish tank lifted of not), which is one of the drawbacks of AP: you need a lot of space for plants if you want to raise some fish because you must dispose of the nutrients.
The solids settling tank quickly evacuates the solids from the fish tank where they are harmful to the fish to the settling tank where they are not.
From there, you can choose to either send them to the growbed(s) for vegetable production or to the worm bin for animal protein production for your fish or chickens.
Very flexible, and adaptable to the growth of your fish and to partial or total harvesting of either fish or vegetables.
At higher densities, you need a bigger pump for faster recirculation.
Having a second overflow on the solids settling tank draining directly to the pump compartment or growbed distribution pipe allows for adjustable flow to both the NFT and the growbed(s) or directly to the pump compartment if one of both overflows is adjustable. More flexibility. KISS principle on all parts.
At higher densities, I would drop some floating beads under a screen in the solids settling tank to also eliminate floating debris and ensure nitrification in all circumstances even if recirculation is not over the growbeds (I have calculated that you need 5 l of beads per m³ of fish tank at a fish density of 100 kg/m³ at a feed rate of 1.5% = 1.5 kg/day/m³).
I tried to enclose the excel filter biomedia calculator but that seems to have failed. Please instruct me.
Plant root aeration is ensured not by the water (which might be O2 poor depending on settling tank draining frequency) but by ebb and flow in both NFT and growbed(s) as already explained.
And it is not a "trickle flow".
and it is not slow either:
each time the pump starts the gutters are quickly filled to overflow. If you want to limit flow in the gutters, put overflows on both sides of the gutters.
Each time the pump is stopped, the gutters start to drain.
Draining speed is determined by drain hole size and number.
Draining height is determined by drain hole position.
Aeration is ensured each ebb cycle.
Flow cycle aerates the water.
ebb and flow frequency is determined either by growbed size and pump capacity if regulated by level switches or can be regulated by a timer.
You don't have to fill the gutters with media but you can.
You could also put the plants in pots filled with media, then put them in the gutters.
Easy to do, the plants have growing support, easy to take out, easy to harvest, easy to clean the gutters should that be necessary.
The combination of all the above would reduce clogging to the utmost minimum if not completely if you remember to cover up unused holes to avoid algae growth.
No blocking, no "subsequent loss of water" at all (which would not get lost anyway -don't know where you fished

this idea- : even in case of -extremely unlikely- blocking, any blocking, partial or not, would drain the water back to the growbed(s).
the worm bed could be replaced partially or completely by a duckweed tank if you don't like worms.
I have not drawn the duckweed tank.
I have adapted the drawing by lifting the bottom of the solids settling tank up a bit.
Now solids removal and injection in the growbed(s) and/or worm bin and/or duckweed tank can be continuous
I have also added most items mentioned in this post.
I have no idea why you would want to criticize level switches in particular and at this moment: NO system is absolutely fail proof, not even a siphon.
The type of level switch (washing machine membrane switches) I have proposed is particularly adapted to the situation, readily available, cheap, extremely reliable, scroungeable, and will work under better conditions than in a washing machine since where it is located all water is filtered.
How often have you seen your washing machine or dishwasher spilling it's water on the kitchen or bathroom floor?
If you are not convinced, you can position the switch anywhere on the opposite side of the inflow of the growbed where algae growth and clogging are extremely unlikely to ever happen.
You know my opinion on air stones and airlift pumps: I think they suck. But that is explained in another thread.
finally, about safety:
aren't you dramatizing a tiny bit?
the ladder/step needed is not 2 m but max. 1 m high. But it could be much higher too which would allow for even more NFT gutters.
But I can see your point, so I have adapted the drawing to make the setup as child and senior safe as possible.
I'm sure you can imagine a safety brake on the ladder wheels.
I could have added a warning sign saying: under 16 and over 50 prohibited, but that would seem a bit ridiculous
Now I like criticism and skepticism: they force me to make my brain work.
I like the "worst case" approach.
Keeps me awake.
I thank you for that.
but TMHO you have been spending a good deal of time just sifting mosquito's (a dutch saying)

(meant as a joke)
friendly greetings
frank