You can easily create your own heat sinks using an 2 or 3mm alu-sheet and a few 1x 1" c-channels glued on the backside using thermal tape. Cooling capability depends on surface area and with ~50-55cm² per watt you have enough surface area for passive cooling.
Thats my new ones made for a pair of HL boards and a few additional mono's.
An thats another DIY heat sink good for ~200w of COB.
Especially when you drive them low there is no need for a thick base plate. The one below is still in use (even the COB's) and if you click the 2nd link in my signature you can see more detailed pics.
This are 6 CXB2540, 3500°k/V4 bin powered by one HLG-120H-C700B and it has maxed out at 160w net and 173w at the wall. I've used it for 2 years and last year I've combined the 6 COB's with a bunch of strips. COB and FS strips run at 175mA and f-strips at 350.(see link in my sig.)
Even maxed out heat sink temps still stay below 45°C. With the usually used ambient temps of 28-30°C that's a Δ of only ~15-17°C. Pretty good for such a cheap solution.
DIY heat sinks can do the job as well as other heat sinks. You only need enough surface area and to calculate it you can use front and back side. The higher the fins the more surface area you'll get. Only make sure to leave enough space between the "fins". You want enough space for good airflow and convection. The higher the fins the more space is needed. 10-15mm is enough. You can simply use the cheap blue doublesided thermal tape from am4zon/e3ay. Its sticky like hell and you need a hammer to remove them for repositioning.
A friend of mine has just glued a few c-channels directly on the backside of a few 140w Zeus boards to get the temps down. He has used six 30x 25x 30mm channels, 1mm thick metal and cut to the same length like the Zeus boards and they have lowered the temps on the backside by more than 10°C. Thats a lot because 10°C less case temps will increase the efficiency already by 2-3%.
Before you order sheets or c-channels call the next local scrap yard. With a little luck you can find what you need an only have to pay the kilo price of 2,70-3 bucks. They usually have lots of aluminum laying around and they resell stuff which is still in a good shape.