@RRK Right, my bad, I messed up a bunch of wording lol. Take two:
So American 48" T8s are called F32T8s. These are what you see (or used to see) in practically every single commercial building ever. Probably the most popular tube in the US (if I were to guess). But in homes, (in shop/garage lighting), F40T12s or their physically identical energy saving equivalent F34T12s are what you will see. But these two popular tubes with identical basing dimensions are not interchangeable.
I am just realizing now that European 48" T8s are called F36T8s. Which is a different name/wattage. And these F36T8s
are compatible with F40T12s, unlike American F32T8s which are not even close to being compatible with F40T12s.
My question is why does the European market get a nice energy saving T8 retrofit for F40T12, while we don't? Our F32T8s need completely different ballasts, while European F36T8s seem to just be a drop-in replacement. Of course here I am just referencing 48" tubes, but this also applies for other lengths.
What are the specs of these European F36T8s of other T8 drop-ins, and why couldn't the US get any of them (or make equivalents)?
And I totally get your complaint about the US fluorescent tube naming system, it is completely ridiculous. I just need to know what is being referred to, watts or inches. I will probably make another column in my datasheet for the tubes common names.