Hi, it's been a while, but the last time for some reason I wasn't able to log in in the forum for at least a week, and was not able to write in the thread, so later I forgot about it
For Ray - here we are talking for rockwools slabs, not mini-cubes. The slabs are 1000x150x75mm. Unfortunately the guy's fasebook page was hacked, so the pictures/videos are gone. The slabs are hanged on some metal hooks horizontaly on top of each other without gaps between them. So, the wall is 1m wide, 7.5cm thick wall. I don't remember the height, but it was probably about 2m. The water is circulating with quite a strong flow.
I contacted the guy and asked him few questions. He runs this wall for 2 years, if not more. He uses mycorrhizal inoculant. The wool has still not degraded and the plants love it. Mostly pleurothallids, but other non-orchids too. And it somehow works, despite that the wool is saturated all the time.
I spoke with another guy to discuss why this works and he had a theory. He supposed that the problem of constantly wet roots is not that they cannot handle the wetness, but it is the formed (probably anaerobic) conditions which are good for bacterial growth, and this is what the plants cannot handle. So he speculated that when growing them in the wet rockwool wall, the roots goes inside the wall, where there is constant flow of fresh and aerated water, which doesn't allow bacterial growth and the roots are fine even constantly wet. Also all the algae and slime is just on the surface of the wall and doesn't bother the roots. Other benefit is that the leaves stay dry.
However, I'm still not convinced that the rockwool will not degrade and fall apart in let say 3-4 years, but at least it won't be impossible to get the plants out from it.