From my experience, I've found many fixture sockets don't make good contact
when the plastic tube cover ends are used. When this occurs, the arcing
causes the ends to melt and the lamps ultimately go out
You should call that store , when they fail they start fires. I have
heard of several large fires caused by bad ballasts.
Fluorescent ballasts for the last 30 years or so, have had thermal cutouts
built into them, to prevent overheating, but prior to that, it was common
for them to smolder and smoke
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Keep the whole world singing . . . .
DanG (remove the sevens)
dgri...@7cox.net
<pinb...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:e66381ce-2d2d-4159...@t54g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
surprisingly, these are t8's. the fixtures all look to have been
retrofitted from t-12's. They must have the electronic ballasts
because the failed lamps are singles and are completely off not
flickering like the t-12's did when failed. I just thought the
electronic ballasts had some type of overheat protection to shut the
fixture down in case of overheating. doesnt seem like the sockets are
failing. All lamps have these plastic tubes on them. The failed bulbs
have the 3" dark spot on the bulb ends and all of them the plastic is
charred or melted /burned away in this area on the tube. Like I said I
saw a bulb that was flickering on its way out, tube plastic red hot
dripping on the floor. told cashier she was more concerned with her bf
on her cell. I Had to catch a movie with wife.
The electronic ballasts do have thermal protection. It's not the ballast
that's overheating.