Sorry to hijack your post man, but real quick question can you mix boards say 3000k with 4000k from start to finish?
Wiring Un-Matched Luminaires...
(The following is only a recommendation and only with respect to wiring unmatched lights, otherwise if only wiring the same style boards together, ie the same models together, then I use CC drivers, or use CV/CC drivers as CC sources, and try to wire the luminaries in as many parallel strings as possible)
Parallel Wiring:
Use a CV driver. What matters is if the forward voltage is the same. If your forward voltage ratings are the same you can mix & match and wire any board you desire in parallel if using a CV driver. It means you'll use the "Vo" POT on the CV driver to control the load instead of the "Io" POT. If you're worried about your strings thermal mgmt, put an inline fuse before it (sized to the strings max current rating). Thermal runaway in CV adds more total current to the entire cct.
If operating a CV/CC driver in CC mode (ie your Vo POT is maxed out and your dimming via Io POT) or using a CC driver...
and if your 2 luminaires have the same forward voltage rating but flow different amounts of current, you'll want to wire inline fast blow fuses before every parallel luminaire and sized to the individual luminaires' max current rating. That way if your thermal management wasn't sufficient, and 1 of luminaries were to heat up and hog current to the point of failure, your safety fuses would trip and the chain reaction wouldn't destroy anything. It's not likely but just a precaution. Thermal runaway in CC drivers only happens in unmatched parallel wiring and doesnt increase total current to the cct, but flows the same current while being diverted unproportional to design.
Series Wiring:
Use a CC driver. What matters is if both boards can handle the same current. That's the only metric that matters. Voltage doesn't matter in series except that your driver has enough of it to push the current through the string. You can mix & match and wire any combo of boards or strips in series, as long as they can handle the same current as what's before it or after it. CC or CV doesn't matter but CC will be more applicable.