As one of the contributors to the previous long eload thread (and happy owner of a Maynuo 500V 15A load), I would suggest that everyone is going to have different voltage, current
and power requirements, so not sure we can offer any
final advice on this topic, other than to make you think widely about your own present and future needs.
I build devices based on nixie tubes
WWW.MrNixie.com which need power supplies up to 200V. I am now building an analogue oscilloscope from scratch. That has 300V and
2KV(!) power supplies. ERK.
If you ever get into beefy audio amplifier projects, you will find that they might easily come with +/- 60V DC rails (which will float higher than that, off load), so suddenly an eload rated at "only" 120v will not cut that mustard.
One thing to watch - I was earlier torn between a
30 Amp 150W 300V load, and a
15 Amp 300W 300V version. Which is "best"? Well, if you are measuring a 15V supply, the former 30A rated load can be used up to only 10 Amps (=150W), where the latter 15A rated load can be used up to 15 Amps!! As Dave would say, "Go figure."
Oh - and remember - any load is not "500V AND 15A", but "any combination up to 300W" would be a more accurate description! And 13.8V x 25A is gonna bust the common 300W limit (bigger eloads are available, but price goes up A LOT).
And finally -
ouch - if you are going to measure anything on the "hot" (mains) side, I would suggest (1) Don't and (2) make SURE that your eload offers the appropriate isolation/insulation from earth. I would not connect my own instrument to a 340V DC mains-referenced supply