You from south africa? Im actually going to do 1000 watt of these strips then im going to do some cobs as well later on, thinking of mounting them on cpu heatsinks and mounting the heatsinks to a frame possibly and heatsink fans will be powered by a normal pc psu
If you run the COB's low like I do you can cool them passive. I use a small U-channel glued into a bigger U-channel to increase the cooling surface and use 4pcs Bridgelux V18 COB's at 500mA or ~17w each or ~70w each "double channel".
Each channel is 1150mm long by the way.
If you click the link in my sigature(400w LED) you can see how it looks in action.
2nd picture shows it integrated into the frame next to the c-channels for the F strips. 25x 25x 25mm c-channels for strips and a 20x 20x 20 channel glued onto a 25x 40x 25mm c-channel for 4 COB's in series. Strips stay below 40°C and COB heatsink stays below 50°C with 28-30°C ambient temps. No need for an additional fan and when you use cheaper COB's but more of them you can get the same efficiency but you can spread the heat onto a bigger surface and cool them passive. 4pcs 12v fans with usually 0,25A needs up to 12w and that's another heat source inside your tent and 12w are after all 12w. With active cooling you also always have the risk of failure. A passive setup is like build it and forget it! No risk of overheating when the surface area is calculated properly.
Formala for passive cooling is ~110cm²/heatwatt or ~60cm² per total watt used. If you know the COB effiency it's easy to calculate heat watts. If you have a 60% eff. 10w COB you get 6PAR/w of light and 4w direct heat. A passive heatsink for such a 10w COB need at least 440cm² surface area to keep the COB's cool to the touch.
I have the formula from the hi-fi corner where they also try to keep the temperatures below 50°C. Allegedly because of leakage currents and such. No idea what it does in hi-fi amplifier chips but we can transfer the formula to LED's 1: 1.