|
1975 GEC MBTW/V 175W in operation
|
Shown here is a peculiar 175 W self-ballasted blacklight mercury lamp made by GEC of England. Typical of earlier mercury lamps of this kind, the MBWT/V 175W features a pear-shaped outer bulb that was eventually superseded by an elliptical one. Even more interesting is its unusual wattage rating, which appears to originate from a burner and ballasting filament combination that is identical to that used in standard 160 W white-light self-ballasted lamps. The different nature in glass material of the outer bulb has an impact on the lamp's operating temperature, which is higher in the black-light variant, resulting overall in a greater power dissipation. This characteristic is unique to British lamps of the kind shown here and resulted in a service life shortened to about 2 kh. Other lamp manufacturers adjust(ed) the filament parameters to keep the total dissipated power at the same standard levels regardless of the bulb used, thereby maintaining a consistent service life across self-ballasted lamp types.
|
|
Tuopeek - your lamp must be suffering from too much impurities in its argon fill, hydrogen most likely. If that's the case, then run it for some time, several tens of hours, so as to let hydrogen diffuse out of the burner. However, this many not be enough if the quartz tube used to make the burner was not properly processed, resulting in a too high hydroxyl ion content in the material, a source of hydrogen when exposed to heat and UVs.