Hi, fairly long time brewer but only recently a poster
Lots of great suggestions and tips on here. 
I recently upgraded from extract to all-grain by way of BIAB, and my first batch, an apricot pale ale, is in the carboy undergoing a tertiary fermentation right now. The process went like this:
Despite the cold crash and use of clearing agent, the beer is still fairly foggy. Looks and smells great, though. I'd like to clear it up a bit more, and am wondering about the use of a filter. My LHBS has plate-style filters with either vacuum or Eurofilter pressure motors. I've used them with good success before with wine, and am thinking about running the beer through a coarse filter to clean it up.
I understand filtration will possibly remove a good portion of the yeast from the beer. Since I'm bottle conditioning, I'm thinking of picking up a pack (or a few) of basic Coopers ale yeast, throwing it in as I add my priming sugar, mixing very well, and bottling then.
Does this sound like a reasonable approach?

I recently upgraded from extract to all-grain by way of BIAB, and my first batch, an apricot pale ale, is in the carboy undergoing a tertiary fermentation right now. The process went like this:
- One week in bucket for primary fermentation.
- Added two 3lb cans of apricot puree to carboy, racked beer on top of it.
- Left alone for one week, then racked to new carboy.
- Cold crashed for one week.
- Added SuperKleer KC, waited another week.
Despite the cold crash and use of clearing agent, the beer is still fairly foggy. Looks and smells great, though. I'd like to clear it up a bit more, and am wondering about the use of a filter. My LHBS has plate-style filters with either vacuum or Eurofilter pressure motors. I've used them with good success before with wine, and am thinking about running the beer through a coarse filter to clean it up.
I understand filtration will possibly remove a good portion of the yeast from the beer. Since I'm bottle conditioning, I'm thinking of picking up a pack (or a few) of basic Coopers ale yeast, throwing it in as I add my priming sugar, mixing very well, and bottling then.
Does this sound like a reasonable approach?