The 600V can not be "pushed" into the tube, the tube always limits the voltage to whatever it "wants". The ballast is pushing the CURRENT into the tube, unless the tube still does not want to conduct below the 600V.
In other words if the tube ignites at 400V, there is no difference, whether the ballast has OCV of 401 or 1000V, in both cases the tube will see the same - becoming fed by current at 400V.
The extra wear on the instant start came from the fact, the cold electrode tube ignites and mainly operates at higher voltage than when the electrodes are hot. That means, the hot electrode ballasts do not need to be made to generate as high voltage for the lamp ignition, so e.g. F40T12 ballast suffice with 240V for a RS, but needs about 500..600V when the electrodes are not heated. But even when the 240V happens to ignite the cold lamp, the wear is exactly the same, whether the ballast is 240V or 600V OCV.
Of course, when the ballast uses the resonance to boost the voltage, generating 400V when starting a good lamp means less stress for the ballast components than generating the full 600V to start the worn out one or when the lamp refuses to start at all.
And with the F40T12 put into a F32T8 fixture means the F40 are severely underdriven, so their cathodes are not operating at correct temperature. That means higher voltage fall on the colder cathode, so more voltage to accelerate the ions there, so higher energy of the ions sputtering the materials off, hence the faster blackening. And even if it does not sputter during normal operation, it takes longer time to warm up the heavier cathodes of the F40, so they operate for longer time in the damaging cold cathode mode, so the wear progresses way more.
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