Here's a quick summary of my trials:
60 Gallon tank, 8 goldfish, 4 loaches, 1 pleco.
5 x 54W T5 HO hood on 8 hours daily
Two bottles of DIY CO2 supplemented with Excel as directed
Initially used Flourish and Flourish Trace. Switched two weeks ago to dry ferts: CSM+B and Potassium Sulfate, plus root tabs.
Typical water conditions:
Ammo: 0
Nitrite: 0
Nitrate: 40+
Phosphate: 4 ppm
PH: 7.8 - 8.0
First batch of plants (http://www.aquariumplants.com):
Red Melon Sword: Mature larger leaves were eaten and damaged by the pleco within two weeks. There is still an ample established and healthy core of new leaves. Some light hair algae problems.
Anubias barteri: Slowly and happily growing. No problems after I finally tied it to some wood instead of burying it. Sending off two or three new shoots. Algae is persistent on this slow grower, both hair and green spot types.
Corkscrew Vals: Have been suffering a slow death. I've still have a few good-sized plants, but they have been going downhill from the beginning. Yellows in some spots initially, some diatoms cling to them, they wither, slowly rot. I cut off Excel for two weeks and saw no change.
Marimo "Moss" Balls: These have fuzzed up like crazy. I'm pretty sure a couple are trying to send off tufts and multiply already. It seems algae is one thing that can thrive in my tank.
Cryptocoryne wendtii (Red, and "Florida Sunset"): Were slow to establish, but look better now. Plagued by hair algae. Old growth was mostly green, flat and became full of small holes not long after introduction. New growth seems to have responded to the high light wattage, and is a deep brown with dark markings. Very wavy/wrinkled, but has a healthy looking gloss.
Baby Tears: Pestered by the fish, and what was left quickly browned and died. No idea.
Bacopa: The stalks started out brownish and may not have been healthy to begin with. The tops began to green up and responded to the light, but they seemed to keep rotting from the bottom until the stalks were too short to replant. They were frequently uprooted by the fish, but were never properly established or rooted.
Frogbit: Rather than floating plants as I expected, I got some small heart-shaped and rooted leafy plants that I planted in the gravel. They greened-up, got molested by the fish, and promptly rotted in the space of a week.
Intermediate Additions (LFS Petsmart)
Cabomba: Easily uprooted and frequently replanted. Seems to love my lighting. The tops are each a much different and brighter shade of green by the end of the day. Seems to completely reject algae. A bit of a surprise for me, because the chick at Petsmart tried to talk me out of them because so many people she had talked to were having trouble keeping them.
Amazon Sword: The same chick mentioned above crammed this beautiful sword into a small bag, which came open in the car on the hour-ride home. The ends of every leaf were in the open air and burned, then rotted when placed in the tank. The plant has ample roots, and shows signs of new growth.
Second batch order of plants (about two weeks ago, http://tntaquatica.com):
Hemianthus callitrichoides: Overnight fish food.
Eleocharis parvula (Dwarf hairgrass): Looks reasonably healthy and enjoys my lighting, though I suspect each planting site is slowly getting picked at and shrinking.
Lilaeopsis mauritiana: As above, though this larger grassy plant seems to be more durable and is faring better. It may even be spreading slightly already.
Didiplis diandra: Started with a couple of small stalks. They had a hard start, but are now greening up and looking promising.
Alternanthera reineckii "lilacina": 80% rotted. Did not establish.
Ludwigia glandulosa: As above. I was definitely pushing my luck with water parameters for these two plants, but risked it on the color potential.
Rotala wallichii: Dead. The specimens I received were pathetic, and they were quickly molested without every really getting a fair chance.