Or how about the 95cri 100watt bridgelux cob thay can push 350watts max. What....
https://store.waveformlighting.com/collections/led-linear-modules/products/100w-cob-led-95-cri-full-spectrum-d65-6500k
Check these out
@Randomblame @Moflow @Rahz
They give full photometric datasheets snd everything. 10,000 lumen at rated voltage. 30v at 3.5a
Thats not a bridgelux COB. Maybe they use blue Blux diodes as the base in this COB's but thats not a Blux COB. Bridgelux has own CRI97 COBs like the Vero29 Decôr Series(100-140lm/w).
On the strips they seem to use Yuji's or Seoul's high CRI LED's, 90-100ml/w, based on purple diodes. The strip spectrum has a blue peak ~420nm. They could have used Nichia's Optisolis(CRI99, but up to 160lm/w) but they don't look like Optisolis. I don' like such wishi-washi.
Strips and boards are also 24v CV which means there is a current limiting resistor connected to each 7 LED's. Thats not the most efficient way to drive LED's. They are more for photographers, museums and galeries.
For plant lighting spectrum 'and' efficiency are key features.
1x 2' Red boards are far to big IMO. If you mix a 4k and a red board you would get pretty bad mixing effect and end up with a red and a white side and a small area in the center with the desired color mix. Red strips between 4k boards would make much more sense. 6 and 12" measurings are also pretty low.
The calculator tool is also useless for other LED's like their own. It would be more useful if you could choose different brand LED's, drive currents and such things. You would need 50 strips to get 40.000lm out of 420w net.; with 35$ per strip that's almost 2 fu....' grands!! If you plan to make a movie, yeah, pretty good! But for plant lighting there are much better siutable products. To me it looks like they just try to give their product a second foothold because the ultra high CRI market is not very big.