| For all plastic film types, the clock is tcking only when power is applied
Oil types depend to great extent on the quality of sealing of the case. Seals that leak oil do lso let in diffusion of moisture, which in small quantities man embed itself into the oil and start a slowly acting destruction mechanism
It sometimes may appear, that powering the ballast after long non powered period may initiate a failure. This indeed may be the case if the conditions have set up during the time it was not powered, like significant moisture accumulation. (With power regularly applied, the damage could possibly be stretched to small steps over a long interval, so not happening all at once with the resulting excessive power dissipation and consequent failure)
However, it is the running of the ballast that sets up the conditions for the moisture to get in in the 1st place : The heat of the ballast when working does eventually wear the sealing of the case (drying gaskets etc), and makes the oil expand so push the seals, and contract when switched off and cooling down
I too think that a low use application will probably be an alright choice. Storage without use is as good for plastic film caps, may be as good for NOS oil filled capacitors, but maybe less so for oil capacitors that already did many hours of continuous work and have significant wear on their seals
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