Does this explain why some Street lights I see with Capacitors only reach 40-65% of their brightness capacity, and don't reach their full brightness?
Well, what looks like "half brightness" is usually way less - about 20% or even much less. The real half brightness appears as just small difference...
And yes, the worn out capacitors are very often responsible for that.
On top of that is the effect of the lamp state being locked in a low voltage saturated vapor mode: Even when the current is not really that low, it is sufficiently low to not give the lamp enough power, so heat, to evaporate all the dose. The thing is, initially the lamp has rather low voltage drop, so the same current delivers half or even less power than it will do with the fully warmed state. And because of the lower arc loading, the efficacy drops a lot as well, reducing the light output even further.
So I would not see as impossible with 50% arc current from a CWA (so a constant current source) the lamp to not reach even 10% of the rated lumen output.