Author Topic: GE fluorescent bulb mercury starvation issues  (Read 198 times)
Lightingeye60
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GE fluorescent bulb mercury starvation issues « on: October 06, 2025, 02:50:58 PM » Author: Lightingeye60
In places that use fluorescent still, I’ve been noticing that the GE lamps are going mercury starved a lot, mainly seen in F32T8s, with them glowing reddish pink, when this was previously an issue with Philips Alto and Sylvania T8s. At the CVS, there are GE fluorescents still used and I see some that are partially or completely mercury starved. I’ve seen it on newer GE F32T8s with no end blackening.

I did see plenty of GE’s mercury starved in the past, but I didn’t see GE’s mercury starved as much as Sylvania or Philips.

The modern GE Ecolux tend to go mercury starved as much as the older Philips Altos did.

At the library, I’ve seen fairly new GE F40T12s mercury starved, when this was never a major issue with them. Previously I’ve only really seen mercury starvation occur on Sylvania T12s and Philips Alto F34s when it came to T12s. It seems like every GE fluorescent is now prone to mercury starvation. The new Philips Alto lamps don’t seem to go mercury starved so I guess those are the best choice now.

The new Philips Altos seem rather decent, the ones from Poland actually seem better than the U.S. made ones. Not sure about the Sylvanias but I don’t think I’ve seen a mercury starved Sylvania with the newer etch style or those that are made in China.
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tigerelectronics
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Long live fluorescent!


UCcObKY_XCMIZZOBNWn-PC4A
Re: GE fluorescent bulb mercury starvation issues « Reply #1 on: October 09, 2025, 02:19:48 PM » Author: tigerelectronics
I see this happening quite a lot at work. We have lots of fluorescent lamps still in service and I’m noticing that a lot of newer tubes in general appear to get mercury starvation. They are lit, but super dim purple. The tubes in question are mainly 36 and 58W T8 bulbs.

The ones that seem to do it the most are Osram and newer Aura Super Long Life tubes, the ones made from around 2010-2020. I think the mercury content is very small in all newer tubes, almost right on the edge of what is even possible to make a fluorescent tube work. Mercury starvation seems to happen randomly even on tubes with low operating hours. I guess the pinch seals at the ends maybe aren’t perfect on all tubes.

Philips tubes seem to work good and don’t seem to experience much mercury starvation, but they don’t last at all. They get one end severely blackened after just one to two years, and then they start blinking and get stuck starters or in the case of electronic ballasts they just die. 90% of dead tubes at work are Philips. So Philips tubes must be junk. I have 3 boxes of Philips tubes at home, they are cheap to purchase so I suppose they may be worse quality than others.

Osram seems to last pretty decently, not great but much better than Philips.

Aura is by far the very best tubes, some are 20+ years old and still working, although they’ve certainly lost some brightness due to the crazy number of operating hours they have! :)

But that goes to show how important strong cathodes are!

I love Aura tubes and I therefore have a small collection of them at home, I don’t have many, but the ones I do have will likely outlast me!

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Fluorescent tube hoarder :P

180wSOX
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Phosco P224


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Re: GE fluorescent bulb mercury starvation issues « Reply #2 on: October 10, 2025, 02:43:25 AM » Author: 180wSOX
In my experience Philips T8 tubes are by far the worst for this. I've seen many that are only 2-4 years old already mercury starved and with minimal end blackening. It seems to be a problem more generally with newer fluorescent tubes which have less mercury than they used to.
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Lightingeye60
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Re: GE fluorescent bulb mercury starvation issues « Reply #3 on: Today at 01:27:37 AM » Author: Lightingeye60
I’m seeing less Philips tubes mercury starved now at least in the U.S. I’ve never seen a new Philips Alto mercury starved, while I’ve seen plenty of modern GE’s mercury starved, even those with minimal end blackening. GE fluorescents from the Savent era have a major issue with going mercury starved.

Mercury starvation in Altos was the absolute worse in their U-bend lamps, but it was also common in their T8s and energy-saving T12s.

I mostly see it in their T8s but I’ve seen a newer T12 with that issue before too. Sylvania has always been having issues with mercury starvation in my opinion ever since they made the ecologic tubes, tho sylvania T12 tubes tend to go mercury starved when the ends blacken a lot. I’ve never really seen a U-bend Sylvania mercury starved, but I’ve seen plenty of their linear tubes mercury starved, both T8 and T12.

I rarely see mercury starvation in T5s, I only saw like three T5s mercury starved in my life. I’ve literally seen more mercury starved CFLs than T5s!

Nowadays, I think GE tubes are the worst when it comes to going mercury starved, when it used to be Philips, right next to Sylvania.
« Last Edit: Today at 01:37:48 AM by Lightingeye60 » Logged
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