Like voltage output to any of the filament heating circuits? (any pair of same-color wires)
Or across the lamp circuits? (reds-yellows or blues-yellows)
Here are the voltage pairs with the full "bright" dimmer setting -
Filament heating:
red to red+red/white = 5v
brown to brown = 4.8v
blue to blue+blue/white = 5v
yellow to yellow = 4.8v
Lamp circuits:
brown to blue+blue/white = 32v
brown to blue = 47v
yellow to red = 51v
yellow to red+red/white = 47v
On another F40T12 fixture (nondimming ballast), the voltage when lit between red & yellow is around 100v, which would give around 40w at the 430 mA rating for T12 lamps.
Here's something I found on the Lutron site about 3-wire dimming:
"3-wire control is an analog control method that is primarily used to control Lutron fluorescent ballasts. It allows dimmers to set the intensity of ballasts by providing a line voltage phase-control signal from the dimmer to the ballast on a dimmed hot wire. The dimmer separately switches the power to the ballast over a dimmed hot wire."
So does that signal get passed through as higher or lower voltage to the blue/white & red/white output wires? I'm pretty clueless about how this stuff works, and I didn't try checking voltage at the dimmed settings.
Meanwhile, I found a picture of the exact Valmont model no. (8G5007W) that's listed in the NF-10 dimmer switch instructions as compatible, and the wiring on that ballast is just like the wiring for Advance/Universal/Valmont included in those instructions. So now wondering if my GE 8G6012W ballast really is compatible with the switch.
It'd also be interesting to figure out if this is actually what it looks like: just 2 1xF40 ballasts attached together, or if they are truly integrated in some way...
Yeah - I'm guessing you could just switch the 2 browns for the 2 yellows, and then each side of the conjoined twins would control a different lamp. (Would just need longer wires to reach all the way across this monster!) I can send this off to anyone interested in doing the autopsy report.