This is indeed the general answer. A more specific answer depends on additional considerations :
Ballast insulation quality varies. Some ballasts don't mind it too much even for years, while others may be damaged
If the ballast is exposed to moisture, its insulation may be bad enough to the point where it barely withstands even normal lamp starting or plain line voltage. In this case the cycling lamp may just what pushes it over the edge
A ballast independent (superimposed) ignitor does not expose the ballast to ignition voltage, in this case the ballast only have to withstand Voc, which any intact ballast will withstand indefinitely
Ignitor quality varies. I have seen an install with 5 floodlights, of which 3 were powered full nights for 12 years with no lamps installed, continuously ticking all night long, and were still intact. (Eltam K75 ballasts and ES50 ignitors)
The worst ignitors i have seen have underrated components which can't survive the "lamp open circuit" condition for too long. In one such ignitor the charging resistor melted right out of the side of the ignitor through the plastic. This is not result of the ignition voltage, but just of it getting powered at Voc (charging the ignitor from the ballast output) for too long
Some ignitors are "smart" types that stop attempting ignition or reduce it to quick attempts with long delay between them if they figure out that the lamp is bad
The luminaire wiring and especially remote ballast wiring is also susceptible to damage from ignition voltage if there is any initial small damage to the insulation
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