This also gets to the topic of how hot you'd allow any system to heat the wort in an effort to ramp the total mash upwards. In other words, if you want to move your mash from 150 to 158F, setting the RIMS output temp to 158F will essentially never get the mash up to 158F. At the very least you'll need to set to 160F to allow for a heat loss offset but even that will take hours.
Since the wort only stays that hot from the time it takes to get from the tube to surface of the mash, I'm relatively confident +10 to +15 is reasonable. So, say you set the RIMS output temp to 175F. **
In that case, my proposition still stands. Go ahead and set the 175F target on the controller and use whatever minimum power output you can get away with to have it consistently output 175F. In the case of a 1650 watt element that's likely going to be 100% when the delta is 25F (at least initially).
** People will often balk at heating mash wort "over mash out temps" in RIMS, etc but it's misplaced concern because all heated mash systems do this. The surface temps of a steam heated mash tun, or the bottom surface of a direct fired mash tun are WAY hotter than mashout temps. Denaturing is time x temperature.