71   General / General Discussion / Re: Durable Lamp Etches  on: February 04, 2026, 02:57:03 AM 
Started by Multisubject - Last post by James
It is possible.  The silicone coating is not pure silicone fluid, it’s often in some kind of solvent which evaporates away.  Perhaps if the etch was not well burned into the glass, the coating coukd dissolve the ink’s own solvent and make it easier to remove.   Years of operation may cause a drying effect that evaporates both solvents, leaving only the harder ink materials.
 72   Lamps / Modern / Re: GE "trimline" 4ft T8 3500k  on: February 04, 2026, 02:53:11 AM 
Started by RyanF40T12 - Last post by James
Trimline lamps were GE’s copy of the earlier Sylvania Octron family of tubes.  So and argon-filled range designed for operation on 265mA ballasts.
 73   General / General Discussion / Re: Durable Lamp Etches  on: February 04, 2026, 12:00:28 AM 
Started by Multisubject - Last post by Michael
Thank’s for that interesting insight of lamp etching James. I find it most annoying on new old stock Philips fluorescent lamps from the 1970s and 80s because these etches tend to be wiped off very easily when the lamp was stored too long. Especially on TL lamps with Silicone coating. Lamps which saw some use tend to have burned in etches which are more robust. Can that be true?
 74   Advertisements / Wanted / Re: Wanted: 4.4uf 650v capacitor.  on: February 03, 2026, 11:42:33 PM 
Started by FrontSideBus - Last post by Michael
I would take two motor run capacitors in parallel. One 3uF + 1.5uF. mine ones have both 475V ratings. We also recently ordered a couple proper capacitors at an online lamp supply store in the Netherlands. They still listed them for sale. I need to ask a colleague which site it was exactly…
 75   General / Off-Topic / Re: Severe weather never sleeps!  on: February 03, 2026, 09:39:56 PM 
Started by lightinglover8902 - Last post by Cole D.
I don’t know how you all deal with this weather for months on end! It’s been in the 20s and 30s in the mornings here in Florida for what seems like weeks now. This morning it was 26, but it got sunny today and in 60s for a high, which was at least a little better. Sunday it never reached 50 and was windy all day.

We are getting warmer weather later this week, even forecast to high 70s, even though a slight cold front is coming again, it won’t get as cold as it’s been.

I don’t mind the occasional cold snap, but this year the rather has been crazy so far! Usually we don’t get below the 50s/high 40s as our monthly low! I’m ready for winter to be over. At least we have “breaks” every week or so where the highs go back to 70s or low 80s. I don’t get how people live in this with no sun all winter. And I don’t know how people work in it all day, and I especially feel for those who have no home. ☹️
 76   Lanterns/Fixtures / Modern / Re: Help!! How do i start 90w sox without ignitor ?  on: February 03, 2026, 08:31:27 PM 
Started by Myrsky27 - Last post by Multisubject
@Ash
That is a very interesting idea! Is it possible that (long term) the wire around the lamp could attract sodium to the surface of the glass and limit lifespan? Or is it not enough surface area to do that?
 77   Advertisements / Wanted / Re: Wanted: 4.4uf 650v capacitor.  on: February 03, 2026, 07:32:33 PM 
Started by FrontSideBus - Last post by Ash
Indeed, voltage rating stays the same for one and for few of them in parallel

Series is a problem, especially in DC circuits or circuits with significant DC offsets. Any tiny leakage in the capacitors or in the external assembly (like contamination on the PCB) will lead to the DC voltage (or DC component of thevoltage) being divided between the capacitors according to the leakage, and not to the main (and well controlled) parameters. This essentially means that any tiny leakage in one capacitor will charge the other one into overvoltage

(This can be overcome with equalizing resistors or Zener diodes, but is only effective as long as the current draw of the resistors is higher than the expected worst case leakage, which might be a noticable waste of power)
 78   Advertisements / Wanted / Re: Wanted: 4.4uf 650v capacitor.  on: February 03, 2026, 07:14:52 PM 
Started by FrontSideBus - Last post by Multisubject
half the maximum operating voltage
As far as I am aware this is completely false. Insulation thickness does not depend on any external factor including parallel capacitance.
 79   General / Off-Topic / Re: Currently Accessing this site through windows XP....  on: February 03, 2026, 06:57:57 PM 
Started by HomeBrewLamps - Last post by Ash
The good thing seen here immediately is that Lighting Gallery website itself is very well built. It is simple and easy on resources, without any dreaded "user experience", and works just the same as it does today



Viruses are foreign software which must arrive on the computer and be executed

Most of the time this happens through user action, ie. the user brings in and opens the stuff. So just not being an idiot prevents a big part of the problem in the first place

With the user out of the way, the rest of the threat is with defects in the normal software already existing on the computer, which would allow it to be hijacked (for example, into downloading and running all sorts of malware, viruses being one of them)

So, the problem is not the viruses (they are a consequence) but the possibility of he system getting hijacked to begin with



In the distant past, "basic" software and OSes were too dumb to have significant security threats facing outside through the network

If you install a fresh copy of Windows 95 and dont enable file/printer sharing, it probably won't have any listening ports by default

If you install a web browser from 1995, it probably doesn't support anything more than basic HTML rendering - No Javascrpt, no ActiveX, etc. The most that can happen is probably it running out of memory trying to load a big page, or failing to load a page altogether



Then things started becoming "smarter", opening new ways for things to be abused

Like the code execution from JPEG images in Windows 98. For the threat to materialize, the images would have to be downloaded to the computer and viewed with Windows explorer. So a possible way to catch anything could be to surf to a website serving such image, and going with Windows explorer to C:/Windows/Temp or the like before its contents are cleared



Windows XP is newer than that

It does have some default OS services interacting with the internet, each of which could have an open security defect

Web browsers used with it (which is anything from IE5 to browsers of ~2014) have complicated code execution mechanisms, which generally aim to execute the code only within the scope of the web page, but actual limits were anything from non existent (ActiveX) to badly flawed (Javascript, ...)

During the product's supported life, such issues are corrected once they are found (maybe or maybe not fast enough), so while the risks keep existing and growing (due to growing complexity of everything), there is an active effort to fix discovered holes

Once the service ends, new holes are still discovered but no longer fixed. Most of those holes are well abused already



New versions of Windows and web browsers are much worse than this in terms of raw possibilities of existence of threats

They are much more complicated, which creates more places where defects may exist. Modern web browsers have so complicated and capable JS engines that they require sandboxing just to keep the code running inside from accessing the system (if the engines would simply not implement anything besides some basic changes to the web page display, this would not be an issue)

Even with sandboxing, they are capable of running code which can abuse side channel attacks like spectre and meltdown. Again, probably would be much less of an issue with a JS engine which does not implement so much functionality (all of which isn't even needed for any proper websites, only for some extreme "user experience" stuff)

The OS itself has lots of services which interact with the "cloud". Some of which explicit purpose is to download and execute additional software on the computer

The only reason why this is considered safe is because the effort to fix everything by the software providers is ongoing. Once this system falls behind, it will become much more dangerous and much faster than e.g. Windows XP abandoned for the same period of time



In short, being mindful in general as a user, and closing system services which have an attack surface (possibly with the aid of a firewall), go a long way in securing a system

Existence of antivirus is not a significant measurement of how secure the system is



I'm on Linux since ca 2003

In terms of security of Linux (with everything running on top of it in a fairly standard desktop install) vs. the described systems above - Linux is on the complex side as a system, and the web browsers are pretty much the same as in other OSes. However, it has much better ability to configure it to reduce attack surfaces

Also, current and up to date versions run well on aging hardware. I have multiple systems running well on Core 2 Duos, and only a few years ago had some running on Pentium 4's, few of which may still be brought back to use as i expand my workshop

(Though right now in front of me i have a pile of just a few year old Lenovo and HP desktops, perfectly capable of any average use, that i saved from scrap - they headed there just because of Windows 11 TPM alola. Which have nothing at all to do with security in the normal sense)
 80   General / Off-Topic / Re: Currently Accessing this site through windows XP....  on: February 03, 2026, 06:12:16 PM 
Started by HomeBrewLamps - Last post by joseph_125
Running Windows 10 with extended support patched for a few more years. I don't like Windows 11 and the direction that Microsoft is taking it. I considered Linux but a few of my important programs are Windows only. I built my computer fairly recently so older versions of Windows weren't fully compatible with it. 
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