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More experienced members may add to this, I am only just got out of newbie status (I think), so take it with a grain of salt ahaha.
Ok so most people will probably want more info, like are you doing anything other then towers for plants (i.e. media beds, and then how much what type), what fish, what stocking density, etc etc. so any plans you have thus far will help people answer better.
Heaps of info on filters, search is your friend.
My two cents is have a RFF (Radial Flow Filter, sometimes called RFS radial flow settler) first no matter what you go with second, as this takes out bigger particles, and lessons maintenance/cleaning on your bio-filter. Trust me, you want to have the least amount of maintenance possible. RFF and Swirl Filter are very similar, with my understanding that RFF has been proved to be more efficient by some smart university types. But much of muchness.
If you are doing towers with no media, and you aren't doing media beds, then you also need to have a bio-filter as well as a RFF. Albeit if you are doing media beds, remember you don't have to have any filtration. My opinion is it makes life easier having filtration, but definitely don't have to if you stick to GB guidelines in terms of feeding and stocking.
Options for bio-filter are fairly large, most popular (in no order) being bird netting, onion bags, shade cloth, plastic bottle caps, old fish netting, etc etc etc. Essentially you are looking for anything with surface area. Of course K1 media (and there like) are the official and best option, but get pricey. I think bird netting would be most popular, depends on what you can get your hands on. I personally currently use half shade cloth (I got off-cuts for free from a shade cloth guy, otherwise he would pay to dump them). The other half is plastic bottle caps from milk bottles etc (I run a cafe, but some recycle shops have them too). This has worked well for me. As my AP is a showcase in my cafe, I get a lot of AP visitors, and most experienced AP'ers comment on my water clarity which is tops! To clean, I fill filter with water, and "hand wash". Once I have enough milk bottle caps I will be getting rid of shade cloth, as it is much harder to clean. Caps just get moved around and water drained, whereas shade cloth needs some manual scrubbing (as I assume bird netting etc would). The surface area of bottle caps I would assume is less, so when I do this, I will keep an eye on parameters, and possibly it means having more bottle caps "space" then I would have shade cloth.
Hope this helps, its probably as clear as mud ahaha
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