RE: Hair Algae (Again)
I would suggest addressing phosphates first. The fuge should help, but it may not be the total answer. The grazers should help the problem, but only if the growth of the algae is less then how much they graze.
By that I mean, if the hair algae is growing by 1/4 lb. per day and the grazers are eating 1/4 lb. per day, then you aren't making much head way. I'm sure the fuge is helping, but perhaps not enough to see an immediate impact. The fuge is good for long term maintenance of phosphate levels, but you may need to look at using a phosphate scavenger to help with the "chronic" problem you are now experiencing.
By bringing your phosphates down, it will stop the growth of the algae and allow your clean up crew time to catch up and eliminate the existing algal bloom. Then you can start to evaluate how well your fuge is doing in managing your phosphates on a day in, day out basis. It may need some additional help from time to time with other export techniques, such as a scavenger.
If you recall, I said in my talk that phosphate control often requires a multi-pronged strategy. The fuge is definitely a good idea, but no single technique may be what you need. I think your long term strategy is good. Maybe you just to re-evaluate your short term strategy a little to address your current hair algae issues.
If it helps any, I'm going through the same thing right now. I ran out of phosphate absorber a while ago and just simply failed to get some more and my clean up crew population declined. I have addressed both issues and am now starting to see some progress.
Gary
125 SPS, 75 gal. LPS/softie reef, 9 gal. Nano