I hate to constantly complain but I'm going to anyway, because I still have problems.

I'm 6 days away from when I'd like to flip my plants to flowering. However, I'm still battling high humidity and the plants that had "taco leaf" still have it. It's not smoothed out as I had thought it was. Now, I will say, I was very naive when I started because like all good newbies, I planted way too many plants and didn't foresee how that would work out in the space I had. I did move some things around and have widened and opened out my space where I could, plus I bought another couple of lights. So, here's the thing. With battling "taco leaf", which I think is a combination from high humidity and also that the plant was too close to the lights, I'm unsure what to do to fix it before I flip.
I currently have a small space heater in there to get the temperature up, and I also have a full size dehumidifier, which works very well. So I have two questions. Number one, does anyone think I should add another heater to my growing area? Number two, if I go by the guide that came with the lights, then I'm back where I was and I'm afraid the plants will suffer from high light intensity, and I'm afraid I will end up with worse "taco leaf". So I was wondering if I should lift the lights even higher and what intensity should I have the light dimmer at?
I tried using a PPFD app on my phone, and if I did it right, it's coming out at over 650, that's at the top of the plant (the light intensity was around 45%).
I will say that when I started, I thought this was going to be easy, and it was at first. But I'm finding the larger the plants get, the more issues I'm having to deal with. Another thing is, I've heard a lot of people saying they are watering twice a week, but when I water my plants with some run-off, I notice that sometimes the very next day they are feeling dry again. I usually stick a couple of fingers down in the soil to at least the 2nd knuckle, and it's feeling dry. Now, I know that sometimes a plant has a similar look when it's thirsty and when it's been over-watered, and the last thing I want to do is to over-water a plant because I know that's an easy way to kill a plant. But when my soil is feeling very dry, I have to guess that it really does need water. It is pretty warm in there, though by some standards maybe not warm enough, it's about 67-68F, sometimes maybe 70-71F if I'm lucky. But to be honest, I'm not really worried about the temperature, I'm more concerned with the humidity. I'd love to get it down before I start flowering, as I know that's an issue which can cause problems.
I'm just hoping that I can get this either fixed, or on the road to being fixed in the next week before I flip. I think other than still having an issue with "taco leaf", my plants look good, are growing well and I'm fairly happy. But it does worry me that the "taco leaf" affects all the new growth and I'm not sure what the long term affects that will have, if any.
So, the questions are ~ should I add a 2nd heater to make it even hotter in there (hopefully lowering the humidity)? And how high above the top of the plant should the lights be, and at what intensity should I be running them? I know that too low and it could affect growth, but too high and I'm end up exacerbating my "taco leaf" issue.
I feel like I'm stuck at a point where I'm not doing any better, even almost a week from when my problem first manifested itself.