About a week ago I bought an older Japanese fluorescent desk lamp (circa 1962 as that is the year the
GE lamp was made) and I have a few questions.
First, I've read that vintage Japanese lamps have brittle plastic especially in the switches. I've been using this lamp for no problem and the switch seems solid and the reflector is not hardened or brittle. Some of the plastic is yellowed though (not the starting switch though) which I consider normal for something of that vintage. Should I have any concerns with the plastic as the lamp is primarily plastic?
Second the base has a sticker in primarily Japanese and it says 100 volts. I saw no signs of overvoltage during operation US is 120 volts nominal and my house is around 123 volts. Should I open the lamp and look for a voltage rating on the ballast?
Third, also on the sticker was a basic schematic (typical of Japanese electronics of that era anyway) and it shows a capacitor in parallel with the start switch. Has anyone had an issues with these capacitors failing? Should I follow traditional radio restoration procedures and determine what type of capacitor it is and replace if it is a wax-paper type?
Fourth, the cord is obviously original, I should replace the cord? I didn't notice any signs of the cord being brittle, should I replace as a preventative measure? I will use a polarized plug. should I wire normally (hot to the off switch) or is there a different method for fluorescent desk lamps.
Lastly and this one is a randacnam7321 specialty. I have this lamp connected to the battery side of the UPS and works better than an Incandescent lamp and virtually no noticeable buzzing on inverter power. Will this either be damaged by or cause damage to the inverter in my UPS?