Resurrecting this topic as I have a question that I believe to be related.
How critical of mains voltage are SBMV lamps..? I have just acquired some 160W lamps rated at 220-230V. However, my supply voltage is quite a bit higher, it averages around 245V as we are literally across the street from a substation. I know that the legal tolerance of supply here in the UK is 230V -6%/+10% which gives a range of approximately 216V to 253V, so we are well within that, but what is the tolerance of the lamp..? Will the life be reduced by running on 245V and if so by how much..?
It will be reduced, mainly the filament part. In your case it means about 8% overvoltage at startup (assume about 40V drop across the cold lamp), so according to
the incandescent performance chart it means about 50..60% life (assume normal filament evaporation is the only dominant mechanism). But if it would be operated at long cycles (ON time longer than the 10 hours/start the rating is designed for), it may compensate a bit (shorter time spent in the low arctube temperature region where most of the evaporation is happening).
At time the SBMV's were made with different voltage ratings, usually the formal rating sets were either "220V" (115..125V), "230V" (225..235V), "215V" (235..245V) or later to two members "220..230" and "230..240V". For you would be then suitable the "240V" or "230..240V" type...