There is a multitude of failure modes as the tubes age. Each leads to the loss of brightness. First, phosphors age, this is most prominent in cheapo halophosphate tubes, but rare earth phosphors suffer somewhat too, may be about -25% at EOL. That's for well made major brands, off-brand tubes may behave much worse. Next there is cathode sputtering. Also some of the tubes, especially the last 'ecological' ones suffer from mercury starvation.
You should not forget the ballasts, electrolytic capacitors are getting dry leading to power loss and flicker, also film capacitors sometimes lose their capacitance causing output circuit detune, brightness loss and ignition troubles.
If you think neon tubes are free from these failure modes, you are just plainly wrong. For mercury and phosphor tubes all mentioned failure modes are here. A recent picture here on on L-G just shows this. Especially for 'classic green' ones having just some single thousands of hours phoshphor life before getting dim. Red neon tubes do not generally dim until very badly made, but have a notoriously finite life because of gas capture.
|
|
« Last Edit: February 14, 2024, 09:43:26 PM by RRK »
|
Logged
|