An interesting thing that I have noticed about Japan's HID lighting portfolio is that virtually all of their 1000W mercury vapor lamps are apparently electrically identical to the North American low voltage 1000W H34 mercury vapor lamps instead of being electrically identical to the North American high voltage 1000W H36 mercury vapor lamps despite the fact that both North American countries and Japan have low domestic mains voltages where Japan uses 100V mains while the North American countries use 110-120V mains. However, I have seen that the North American countries have discontinued the low voltage 1000W H34 mercury vapor lamps and ballasts much earlier and opted to use the high voltage 1000W H36 mercury vapor lamps and ballasts instead due to the fact that 1000W H36 mercury vapor lamp/ballast setups were said to be more efficient than the older 1000W H34 mercury vapor lamp/ballast setups when considering autotransformer ballast circuits. Even though Japan has commonly used 100V autotransformer ballasts for many of their HID lamps, I am wondering why Japan still opted to use the low voltage 1000W mercury vapor lamps instead of designing high voltage 1000W mercury vapor lamps despite their higher efficiency.
Here is an example of a spec sheet for a typical Japanese 1000W mercury vapor lamp:
https://www2.panasonic.biz/ideacontout/2014/09/23/2014092300130150.PDFAdditionally, here is some information about a 100V HX-HPF autotransformer ballast specifically designed for the Japanese low voltage 1000W mercury vapor lamps:
https://www-iwasaki-co-jp.translate.goog/lighting/support/products/detail.php?ItemNo=H10TC1A71&_x_tr_sl=ja&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=sc