In one of the pictures you can see the PVC structure I built, it was used in every single test to hold the lights 12" above the rim of the tank.
Unfortunately I did not "normalize" my camera data. The light and color temperature that the LEDs put out already makes my cameras sensor think it is on an acid trip, so I set the camera on shutter speed priority (1/60), messed with exposure bracketing until I got a decently representative picture, and then let it pick its own aperture (somewhere around f3.5-5.0 at ISO400). After that I just did a lot of post processing in photoshop to get the colors as close as I could and the exposure to show the actual coverage of the tank that I was seeing.
The better displayed PAR of the 80 degree optics is an artifact of the way I measured it. All of the PAR numbers you see are measured directly in front of the coral that they are printed on. So even though in front of my zoanthid colony the 80's read 140 and the 60's read 100, it is due to the fact that my zoanthids are right near the front glass, 12" horizontal from the center of the fixture. I am sure the 60's would get better PAR on the sand then the 80's, but you would have to measure directly under the fixture, which in my case is compltely filled with rock. Look at the numbers near the top of the tank, while the 40's still put out more light then an 8 bulb T5HO fixture (which is enough to grow any coral) the 60's absolutely blow them away.
In my future tank which will be 72"x30"x24" with two major SPS islands on the side and a clam or two in the central sandy valley I plan on using five fixtures. Two pairs will be clustered directly over the islands on either side of the tank and they will be turned so that the 10" long side of the 8.4"x10" heatsink will run front to back to get the most coverage on the 30" wide tank. I'll have acess to a PAR meter down there so if I can swing it the outside edges of the fixtures will have 80 degree optics and the inside bulbs will have 60 degree optics. The center fixture will be smack dab in the center of the tank, mounted at the same height, but will have no optics and will be primarily used for coverage (no need to intensely light a sandy valley). That being said I will probably use four or six 40 degree optics strategically placed on the center fixture to really spotlight and blast the clams all the way down on the sandbed.