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what would the more successful AS methods be?
I agree with the comments above, but add that it will also depend on what you want to achieve (would you like another colony or do you want to maximise the harvest, or something else?), how much kit and space you have available and perhaps how comfortable you are making up your own bits of kit. Oh, and how good are you at finding the existing queen when you need to?
Assuming you're going to rely on a swarm cell to produce a new queen then swarm control may always be a bit of a gamble. You can create an AS using the Pagden method for instance, but then what do you do with the queen cells you're leaving? You could break down all but one, but then there's the risk that that queen may fail and you're left with a queenless colony. Leave more than one and there's the risk that you'll still get a swarm if the first queen to emerge doesn't nobble all of the others. Even if you leave just two queen cells then the possibility exists that they might emerge at close to the same time and potentially injure each other when fighting for dominance, though I can't claim to have definitively known that to happen myself.
At my home apiary I have plenty of space and I can bodge kit up if necessary so Pagden is a fairly straightforward solution. I have hives at a local farm where space is very restricted and there some form of split that uses the same hive footprint is more practical, though I know I lose swarms from those hives anyway because it's not always practical to inspect.
James