It is - more to digest, many thanks! Thanks for the summary too.
Yes, the thread was about finings and this then (most usefully) progressed to filtering as that was 'also' a way of achieving what I was interested in. To clarify though (see what i did there

), with either method I'm
NOT interested in putting aesthetics ahead here: I would 'like' the beer clearer and am interested to see if removing stuff could help long term stability, but I'm not willing to detectably sacrifice flavour or mouthfeel. It seems likely that with care, and not taking things to extremes, there may be a way to have at least some of my cake and eat it.
Anyway, I tried aux finings in the brew that I kegged last night, and it was considerably clearer than normal from the FV. So that was quick and easy and looks very potential - hopefully it'll brighten up more/quicker than normal in the corny now too. Its also cloudy 'enough' that I'm sure there'll be no worry about it still conditioning, its a bit too new to really judge flavour, but it wasn't lacking and the body is still all there - there didn't seem to be as much hop aroma as normal from the dry hopping but that could be the hops I used (not sure as yet). I'll have to investigate filtering and equipment before I try that but its something I'll definately try and then I'll be able to compare.
So a big thanks to everyone thats contributed so far, its realy been very helpful - sometimes my less basic questions don't get much (informed) response, but theres 'loads' of high quality stuff come out of this one, superb!
Cheers
Kev
PS on the guinness, I remember a thread about BYOBRA's recipe - can't remember if it was a misprint or not but generally people seemed to feel the roast barley was over-egged. As above, I use 7:2:1 pale:flaked-barley:roast-barley and lots of people like it but to be fair its not very like guinness - the roast flavours are much fresher and more pronounced; far superior in my view but thats always going to be a matter of taste.