ok ... lets see if i can get this one right... my guess 2 males 3 females, one thing i noticed from my greenhouse attempt the strongest bigest ones tended to be males..... i don't know if thats the same for all strains but my two monsters had nuts!, was pig sick bruv
is it a sweepstake +rep if your right?
Yeah with the rep

sounds a gd plan
I'm thinking 2 females and 3 male... a little less optimistic but, it's actually what I'd prefer.
quick question mate ... how close are you getting your lights to your plants?
Well that was a dilemma for me, but I now keep them up as far as possible in order to stretch them up, so I can bend them more to suit my training

But ideally, for growing straight up proper vegging I put them as close as possible but still giving room for growth, about 2" away.
Once I've started flowering, I'll drop the lights back down to keep all them lovely tops low, when they're tied down. That switch over, actually, I may decide on fully nearer the time and see how far they've got - it's only a week away (I may have to add another week but I don't want to) and I want as many new nodes as poss by then.
Closer lights will make your nodes tighter together. Whereas when the plant stretches with the light farther away, the nodes will grow farther apart.
I personally think it's better to keep the nodes closer, so that buds can eventually grow up in to each other a lot easier, kinda deal - makes them look bigger lol I also speak in 'Micro Grow' terms as well and for you, you have less worry with keeping the plants shorter.
As for a scientific answer, I can't really say what is better without tests.
What they actually need is the blue and red spectrum and none of the others. That I know is true. So I would devise a theory, that the angle of light spread from the bulb being closer, would have the plants exposed to a wider angle of each spectrum's spread, so in leyman's terms, more light. More light should be equal to more energy going into node production, than into stretching to reach the light and producing more stem than node.
Hope that helps
