The ac powered cobs are not worth the time, they're garbage. Hlg is good but I agree with costs for their newer units. But they do have a good deal on their older tech. 4 panels for like 125$, I forget size but think they were 132 s. 240 watt hlg driver 60$ run soft so no need for heat sinks according to there site. My main light is 6 Citizen 1212 cobs on an hlg 480 on an aluminum water cooled bar. Diy. My design, works great for me but too powerful for veg. I run it at about 235 watts at 18" for veg and it does great. Per ft wattages I have found most saying 30 to 50 watts per sq ft for flowering and half of that for your veg. Really depends on the efficiency of the led to find that spot that works for your setup as well as the height you'll be working with. 15 watts a sq ft in clone box does good growth at 8 to 12 inches from plants. 20 watts a sq ft does massive growth in the big veg room at 18" from plants. 40 watts a sq ft does amazing for my flowering room at 2 ft height. The more efficient the led the less wattage can be run for the same results. If you're not needing a lot of smoke a small grow cabinet would work. I could grow one good plant in the cabinet box with LST to keep it short and bushy. All depends on your goals. How much you looking to yield, how much room you got, and how much you want to invest right now. I love my leds but I could get a full hps setup ready to plug and grow for 200 brand new. I'd never do that as I'm an led guy, but if I was starting at the beginning again and wanted the best cheapest I could get with little to no dyi involved I'd do a 315 hid setup and graduate into led as $ allowed. Or spend a bit more up front for an led startup, or do a lot of diy to build it your way. I'd stick with hlg drivers though and a good quality led if you build one. Or the bulb setup seen here is an option. Obviously Northwood is getting it done, I'm trying it out as a veg light. Eventually I will do a more efficient setup for veg, bulbs are only producing about 95 lumens per watt. My bar setup is about 135 lumens per watt. The qb boards and strips are in the 180+ lumens per watt range. Hence more plant growing light from the same electrical usage. That's why you see the 30 to 50 range of watts per ft. Crunch some numbers and see what your goals are and what your budget point is.