The only think that concerns me is writing CSP's and having the SP dump hard for some reason, for which there could be a number of catalysts, the FED, margins, CT delay, Elon sell a pile of shares, etc. I don't see how writing spreads or condors helps that, I essentially need to maximise my weekly premium, with some kind or risk mitigation so I can close, or roll ATM more likely, as many -c200's as I can, selling ATM, or even slightly ITM CSP's seems the way to go with a rising SP and playing The Wheel on Steroids when it's range-bound
Right now I have 50x July 21st +p200's that I bought to give some kind of protection for selling -pATM's, as it was the 30x -p260's I had assigned 23rd June, partly because I was locked out of my account, but I decided to let them go anyway. But then I had 3000 TSLA I could sell -c260's against and the 50x +p200's allowed me to straddle another 30x -p260's with them, then you get double the premium with zero risk, the previously put shares covering the upside and the existing long puts the downside, this is a very good situation. Then if the calls exercise and you're back in cash, sell -pATM again without stress because you've still got those +p's protection, you can even sell 50x, allow 30x to assign and roll 20x, add 10x, but you need that safety-net of long puts (well I could actually cash-cover most of it, but don't want to be holding shares put at $280 if we drop back down below $200)
If the SP dumps then you can roll the weekly puts down, and again straddle calls against them, if the SP keeps dropping then you cash-in the +p's and buy back some of the -c200's with a discount, then you have more contracts free to write weekly -cATM or -cOTM
Even a rise in the SP, up to say, $350 isn't a problem if you have long-dated +p250's to catch you if it reverses, and remember, if in cash, then the first set of puts you let assign to sell calls on the way back down, while straddling with a new set of puts
Damn, this is all a bit verbose, hard to explain it, hope it makes some kind of sense...
But you can get very creative, but you do need the capital to back it - then that goes back to the "not over-committing" yourself, always have an escape-route