Hmm! I don't know the costs of his puks but you can do such a 10w floodlight for less than 20$. When I would use discret diodes like on the puks I would spread them out for better coverage. The Floodlights have a poor reflector and a 3mils thick glas plate and the chips are anyway not really efficient when running at 900mA(maybe 25%). You need probably 4 of them for an 4x 8' growarea.
Discret top bin Cree or Osram diodes in far-red are nearly 50% efficient. You could use small c-channels to mount the stars on an integrate them into your fixture. Those channels are cheap to get(scrapyard, metal store, walmart). Better coverage means each plant get the same intensity. With only one 10w floodlight(6,5w) for a 4x 4' the plants on the outer edge do not even get 50% intensity. At the end you get an uneven canopy, because the plants stretch to different degrees. Granted, I used it myself for a long time(2 of them), but now I'm using only 6 top bin Cree's, which I operate at 270mA. That's ~5w over a 2x4 'and I only need 4 minutes (2 + 2) to achieve the desired effect.
My canopy stays nice an even and I reduced the consumption 4 times. Instead of 13w for 4 + 4 minutes, I now only need 5w for 2 + 2 minutes and I can use the Cree diodes probably for the rest of my life while the floodlight drivers do not even last 2 years. And if you consider what the conversion of 4 flood lights costs, you probably drive cheaper if you spread 5 or 6 Cree diodes on a 4x 4 '. You can run it at 700mA, that would be 1.6w per diode. 10 pieces would be 16w, which you can easily arrange over your grow space. You could take two 90" c-channels and distribute them in parallel across the whole area and for 10 pieces a Meanwell APC-25-700 (15.95$) is enough. 10 Cree far-red's cost $ 25 and the C-channels do the same. If we take the small parts and wires to it it costs about the same, but provides a better result.
It's probably a bit of work so it's up to you. I would just put on discrete brand diodes. Once built, you will never have to worry again! At the temperature range we usually drive them, they are expected to run for 80-100k hours.