Probably not with just the one head, unless it's a very tight shot where you can get the light *very* close to the subject. Some of it would depend on the light modifier you may or may not use. I put my lights in a softbox with the front diffuser attached. Without it I might get another stop of light.
If you use a reflector, or better yet, a second light for fill, it's more likely. My setup so far is the 2 big 105 watt lights in one softbox as the main, and 2 separate 35 watt CFL's as fill/hair/rim or whatever.
If I do buy the Impact 5-light head http://www.bhphotovideo.com …ive_Lamp_Fluorescent.html
, it will be because I can replace the 30 watt bulbs included with 5 50 watt bulbs instead. http://www.1000bulbs.com …ompact-Fluorescents/8742/
That would put out a LOT of light... about 1250 watts tungsten equivalent for one head.
I am still working all this out, but so far it looks like you need to put out at least 20,000 lumens of light (around 1,500 watt tungsten, or 400 watt CFL) to get the shuuter speed up enough and the aperture closed enough to work comfortably.
Going with strobes is the easy answer, of course, and with a flash meter, it isn't really that hard technically. It just takes some practice pre-visualizing the light. My goal is to be good at both.