im not sure if you are asking "what is the advantage to running a CV driver in series like most DIYers" or ""what is the advantage to running a CV driver as opposed to CC in series like most DIYers"
the former is impossible with the chips we use - CVs only really work in parallel unless you have low voltage single diodes or cobs (3-24V)
1.you can add and remove cobs as you please and run them as hard or soft as you like. with a 200W driver i can run 2 cobs at 100W, 3 cobs at 66W, 4 cobs at 50W, 5 cobs at 40W, 6 cobs at 33W, etc. (and dim them all to less as needed)
with a 200W constant current driver you can run 4 cobs at 50W each, 3 cobs at 50W each or 2 cobs at 50W each. in the latter two cases youre utilizing less than 75% and less than 50% of your driver. want to run 5 cobs? too bad- your voltage wont allow it. want to run cobs over 50W? sorry youre limited to 1400 mA
2. makes better utilization of driver. in almost all cases you can get the full 225W output watts out of an HLG185. with constant current drivers depending on your voltage, if its a close match youre lucky to get 200W tops
3. nowhere in the system do you have high DC voltage. its at cob level - 36 or 50V, not 200-400+ with some constant current setups. this makes wiring inherently safer and opens up a wider use of holders such as BJBs which are limited to 150V
"A" drivers have built in voltage adjustment to limit voltage and control thermal runaway. "B" drivers are hard capped at their nameplate voltage (36,42,48,54, etc) and can also prevent thermal runaway when selected carefully to match cob voltage
so in short, there are little to no advantages to constant current drivers. other than thats how people want to do it because they saw it on youtube. In OPs case, there is no constant current driver that is ~100W and delivers 1750+ mA - it just doesnt exist. and with one cob there is no parallel or series to think about.