Welcome to the boards.
I agree with minimum, no real cause for concern on heat.
"Brightness" is very difficult, because it characterizes a human response to the stimulus (light) rather than the light itself. So what looks brilliant in a darkened room may be fairly difficult to distinguish in daylight conditions.
Furthermore, the luminous intensity rating (the number 4500 mcd) wihtout an accompanying beam angle gives only a partial indication of the light output for these LEDs. Outside the beam angle, the power output is less than (maybe a lot less than) half the maximum. So very narrow beam angles will be very bright when viewed on-axis, but quite possibly not even noticeable when viewed off-axis. You'll see that for the same light output, the mcd number goes up as the beam angle goes down. So don't get tempted to buy LEDs based on the highest possible luminous intensity rating (mcd).
The
lumen conversion wizard will help you compare LEDs with different luminous intensities and beam angles.