All seems so wild to me on the other side of the world....
Why would effort be made to produce dim, inefficient, big, and requiring expensive ballasts F25T12 for home use, and then put them in twin fittings anyway ?
when a single F40 does as good job ?
Or F20T12 at its normal power, half the size, with just a choke ballast, would put out the same light as one F25...
(And if it has a few Lumens less, then overdrive it by a couple Watts to get those Lumens up....)
The brightness of full power operation would be way too much for the domestic use, because how close these fixtures are.
Yes, it would be possible to use a diffuser with a single F40T12 tube, but that is either very expensive, prone to getting dirty or inefficient (wastes, absorbes, a lot of the light). Mainly in the past there were no suitable materials making a good, efficient long lasting diffuser for low enough price. When using more lamps and reducing the power density you get away with bare bulbs, so no cost for the diffuser, no light lisses in it, nothing to collect dust that is then blocking even more light, nothing to yellow down,...
Plus shorter tube costs more to make than the mainstream size made in huge quantities (because it needs retooling, not just replace the filament feed and the etch stamp and keep the rest of the machinery the same as with the mainstream F40T12), so also a cost benefit.
Plus two lamp ballasts cost about the same as a single lamp full power ballast, so no saving there.
Using two physically large lamps and feeding them by reduced power was just a cheaper way to get what was needed.