I don't think there will be much difference in the probability to destroy the lamp (not only the resistor, it may cause flashover and arc in the outer, destroying the assembly there).
It mainly depend on how high voltages the inner components can survive vs how high voltage the hot arctube needs to ignite. Because once the discharge in the main arctube ignites, the high voltage stress is over, it will just short out the ignitor output. And the ignitors are not capable of delivering any significant current on the HV side, they are just able to provide some initial ionization, the high capacitive load on "long range" (designed to work with long wiring to the lamp) ignitors deal with this load by using longer time pulses, so the discharge still shorts it out effortlessly once ignited...
|
|
|
Logged
|