Upon some further investigating, it does look like
CERTAIN dimmable ballast manufacturers state that their ballasts can safely start
lamps matching the dimmed settings (in fact, Sourdough, the reference was to a lumatek ballast in regards to that.) I've noticed disclaimers on a few that specifically state
NOT to do that. So I think your mileage may vary depending on who the manufacturer is. General safe rule of thumb (if you're not sure about your ballast) would be to use the maximum rated bulb and dim it down that way (which seems to be the main supported method by ALL.)
Do you have a model number on your lumatek ballast, Sourdough?
Remember that it´s dimmed down to 200 watts.
Your quote refers to a normal ballast that has higher wattage than the bulb.
Rilla.
250W Mh bulb at 200 Watts with my 400/300/200W Chinese ballast.
It seems to work fine, lots of lights and it draws 200W from the net.
Rilla, you're running a bulb already
not rated for your ballast and running it on a dimmed setting that assumes you're using the
correct corresponding lamp (which you're not,) and even that is based on the assumption that your Chinese ballast is the type that even allows that. Even if you were using a lower wattage bulb, you're still not using the correct lamp to match the power settings on your ballast.
:dunno:
I'm not going to try to convince you on how to interpret the quote; just want you to be safe and not potentially start a fire! Thanks bud!
