Good question, @MetaLizard62080 .
It's not really possible to give a definitive answer on this. It depends on many things, not least your objectives. In this case it sounds like you are quite confident about the location of the optimum factor setting, so I am wondering why you need to do the experiment.
But here are some things to thing about...
Having broad ranges will generally increase the power of your experiment to detect important effects; making big changes to the system should result in big differences in the measured responses. Setting the ranges too narrow can mean that you don't see a big enough "signal", and it gets lost in the "noise" of the experiment.
Setting the ranges too broadly could mean some of the runs result in total failure of the system and no measurable response data. That is not ideal, of course. But it could still be useful information.
In my experience, it is more common for people to set ranges too narrowly than too broadly. So I generally encourage people to be bold with setting their factor ranges. Scientists often think they understand the system better than they really do. Also, they tend to underestimate the noise.
Bear in mind that you can always augment with more runs to look at broader or narrower ranges in the next phase of your experiment.
I hope this helps,
Phil