Good link Corgy. Haven't looked at the light question much since I bought my light. I went with the LEC315 (for UV), and I believe in the tech and I've had good results with it. I did come away with a feeling at that time that ANY artificially produced light needs to maintain a minimum distance from the canopy to allow for proper blending of the light spectrum produced. I was considering the purchase of an LED rig and I believe the bleaching seen in older LED grows supports this, particularly where the spectrums produced by early LED tech centered mainly on either the red and blue grow peaks and ignored other parts of the spectrum. The addition of white spectrum LEDs in these rigs in later generations and their improvements in growth patterns also, to me, would bear out this line of thought. At this point, LED manufacturers use chips that produce light across the entire spectrum, furthering the consideration of proper height to allow blending as well as the use of diffusers (GN HSI Hologram!). Just a thought.
To get back on point there are grows documented here using 1000s of watt and they are quite successful. Removal of the heat produced appears to be the limiting factor, agreeing with posts above. In seedling I think its unnecessary and a waste of electricity. I start at 90 watts of blue LED at this point. When the leaves look big enough and a few nodes stack up supporting more photosynthesis, the big light goes on, but high at 36 inches, and lowering through veg. In flower, I get as low as I can, and with my setup consider 20-24 inches the sweet spot, based on light charts and personal observation of my grows. That being said, I just finished a Thai that was 12 inches from the bulb the last 4 weeks, which would of absolutely scorched (and has, LOL) anything else. So strain choice and its ability to absorb light is also a large consideration. In addition, taking advantage of overlapping fields of low level light is a proven strategy to boost light field intensities, Think CFL and FWIW LEDs (100 pieces x 3w each or whatever). I am also aware of a post but unfortunately cannot remember the link that details a plant's reactions to ratios of red and blue light and how these ratios drive growth.