I never had much luck culturing Tigriopus indoors but my backyard cultures are doing pretty good. Having many cultures is the key to a more or less steady supply. The good thing with Tigriopus is that they are not to much bothered by contaminations (rotifers, bacteria,...), in most cases they just eat them. Also, outside the conditions are too harsh for anything you might contaminate them from your tank. They are also not picky with water quality so I only use old tank water for them - they actually like their buckets mucky with a layer of mud on the bottom. I usually culture them with green water (mystery blend that came from spores in the air here) and feed occasionally pulverized rat food.
They grow and reproduce relatively slow but are extremely hardy and resilient.
Apocyclops, on the other hand, seem to be very prone to attract rotifer contaminations. At least that is my experience with them. And because they grow and reproduce rather slowly (compared to Parvocalanus) they are easily outcompeted by rotifers. I tried both, feeding algae concentrate manually (ideal would be an automated dosing pump) and live algae (in a more or less self-sustaining algae bloom). Both ways the cultures ultimately crashed after a month or so. I think water changes could help and only add as much algae as they can eat in a few hours. I'm gonna try that next.
Parvocalanus is my copepod of choice now as they grow fast and reproduce quickly A bucket may only have a live expectancy of 2 to 3 weeks but you can get a lot out of it. Like with Tigriopus, but for different reasons, having many cultures is key. I plan on starting a new 5 gallon culture every day as soon as I have a shelve set up for them.
The drawback for many is that Parvocalanus only eats live, motile algae but not algae paste or non-motile algae like Nannochloropsis. But culturing Isochrysis isn't that hard, just space consuming. You will need at a minimum 200ml algae each day per 5 gallon of culture.