Most tubes Ive seen doing it were the ones operated after long time inactivity and at a place that has been cold for a long time. And doing it only after start and only few times. To me it looks like it happens after the mercury has chance to condense or get absorbed (into amalgams). What exact mechanism causes the effect I don't know, but it is most likely linked to the mercury vapor content or maybe its uniformity along the tube until it gets recovered into sufficient and uniform mercury pressure along the tube. Or it could be some other gasses leaking in and needed to be hammered back into the structures to clean the tube atmosphere back...
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