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Sylvania LU50 50w Lumalux BT25 from 1980
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This is an early 50w High Pressure Sodium lamp, it didn't even exist three years earlier. The arc tube is much larger than modern 50w arc tubes due to the large bore design. The large bore design requires heat shields at the ends of the arc tube for proper temperature control. Additionally, this lamp features the BT25 envelope, Sylvania eliminated this shape in 1981.
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Thorn was faced with the problem of back-arcing which led a fast deterioration of the electrodes, and thus to a fast end blackening of the burner. For this reason, they used a larger burner diameter to limit the extent of end blackening and keep the lamp voltage rise over time as low as possible. In the case of Sylvania, I don't think they suffered the same back-arcing problems as Thorn did - it seems that the reason for the large bore burner is just a pragmatic design approach: They simply used the ceramic tubing employed for the 70W production until they could implement a properly designed 50W burner.
By the way, I have a later model of this 50W lamp; it has the rounded BT bulb the company used during the early 1980s and features smaller burner, which still features the heat-insulating metal bands strapped at the discharge tube's extremities.
BTW, the rounded ET23.5 shape you mentioned came out in '88. Between '81 and '88 Sylvania used the ED23.5 envelope, just FYI.
As for the size of this 50W burner, I think it only has the diameter of 70W discharge tubes, but its electrode distance should be shorter so as to maintain a proper wall load and temperature during full regime.
Yes Dave knows a lot, but I learned a lot from HIM and from looking at lamps I get....I am always interested in "How old is that thing what changes was it made what features" blah blah.....
So it was 1988...I was pretty close...thought it was around 1989...