> is the benefit outweighed by the additional cost of more copper for the additional wires?
don’t cheap out on wiring. a few years after you move homes, you find some new hobby: woodworking, CNC or 3d printing, restoring pinball/arcade machines, HiFi audio, hosting LAN parties or just a few beefy gaming or video editing rigs, hot tubs, _whatever_. you can’t predict it, but there’s a good chance it’ll need power, and once you pass 1500 W in one area of the home you’re gonna either be playing the “semi-permanent 50-ft extension cords bridging the under-utilized circuits to the over-utilized rooms” (and shuffling those around with every spring cleaning) or paying 4 figures to rip out the drywall and rewire shit. just pay that up front: it’s not worth the hassle and if you have a decent realtor you’ll recoup the bulk of the investment come sale time.
don’t cheap out on wiring. a few years after you move homes, you find some new hobby: woodworking, CNC or 3d printing, restoring pinball/arcade machines, HiFi audio, hosting LAN parties or just a few beefy gaming or video editing rigs, hot tubs, _whatever_. you can’t predict it, but there’s a good chance it’ll need power, and once you pass 1500 W in one area of the home you’re gonna either be playing the “semi-permanent 50-ft extension cords bridging the under-utilized circuits to the over-utilized rooms” (and shuffling those around with every spring cleaning) or paying 4 figures to rip out the drywall and rewire shit. just pay that up front: it’s not worth the hassle and if you have a decent realtor you’ll recoup the bulk of the investment come sale time.