Why not use just a few 5k strips as sidelights in your 3k tents? It would add enough blue wavelength for the vegetative stage and would also help with the temps because sidelights are at the same height.
IR diodes are not a good idea because they are not very efficient in producing heat. Use a small heater if needed or just dimm the exaust fans. A temp/humidity controller is very helpful here.
The most issues with LED's are caused by the missing heat radiation, that's right. But there are other ways to deal with it as to add 100-200w of IR. A 1000w HPS has around 20% heat radiation, its not a good idea to mimic this with LED's.
You need to keep an eye on the humidity in your grow area. That was not so important with HPS because of its radiated heat.
With LED's we need higher ambient temps to get higher leaf temps but with higher ambient temps you need higher humidity too keep the VPD in a healthy range.
Use 70-75% in early veg, + 80% in the germinating stage, lower it to 65-70% in late veg and early bloom stage and use 60-65% RH in the flowering stage.
Recommend VPD values are..
0,4-0,8kpa in early veg
0,8-1,2kpa in veg and early bloom and
1,2-1,6kpa in mid to late bloom stage
Recommended temp range 28-30°C for all plant stages!
That's a VPD chart which already has -1° less leaf than ambient temps. You can use the numbers without changes..
View attachment 4340265
Believe me, the most common issues new LED growers have are caused by too low humidity.
You don't need AC and you can also use a smaller exaust fan but you should add a humiditier and maybe also a heater if its impossible to get the temps up. 28-30°C is the optimal temp range with LED bit that don't means you can not grow with lower ambient temps. Only make sure the VPD is in a good range.
A too high VPD cause more transpiration and more transpiration means more nutrient uptake. And especially too much calcium can quickly cause issues because it locks out other metalls like magnesium and phosphor and later iron aso. too.
You can deal with a too high VPD too. Lets say the VPD is +1,0kpa(25°C but only 60% RH) but the plants are in early veg and should rather have between 0,4 and 0,8kpa. You can either increase the humidity to +70% or lower the nutrient strength accordingly. +1,0 is ~30% too high and when you use 30% lower ppms the plants can transpire more water but still take up an healthy amount of nutes.
Copy that chart, print it out and hang it next to you temp/humidity controller. Add a humidifier to your room and use the temp side of the controller for exaust and the humidity side for the humidifier!
If you keep that in mind its much more easy to work with LED's.
Read also my answer in the UV thread. XP-G3 don't exsist in deep-red, only white and royal blue. XP-E2 and Oslon Square series are the latest deepreds and both create +4μMol/J in the highest binnings.
To run Q-series strips you can use B version HLG drivers. They are dimmable down to ~10% and a good dimmer costs 6 bucks(rapidled, prewired). Connect it to the dimming wire and thats it! Dimming means you have much more control over the spectrum when using different types of diodes and you can use it for veg and flowering stage.
Optimal range for germination, veg and flowering stage are..
150-300μMol/s/m² in early veg and germination
300-600μMol/s/m² in veg and early flowering stage and
600-1000μMol/s/m² in the flowering stage.
I'll add a pdf below with a few recommendations from fluence. But be careful with the PPM/EC recommendations, they depend on your grow style. The numbers in the pdf are much too high if you use cocoDTW for instance. Humidity numbers are also on the high side which means the plants take up a hell lot of nutes all the time.
Rather use the chart above to stay on the safe side.
I hope I've answered all you questions..