yes, the heat produced by the ballast when its on makes electronics and solder joints and parts "expand" slightly, then while off they cool and "contract" slightly...so the more you do this the higher the likelyhood of a failure, but keep in mind, cheap ballasts use cheap parts, and probably have cold solder joints that can easily detatch, more expensive ballasts use higher quality parts and are less prone to failures.Are lights and ballasts that are setup in lighting schedules where they turn on and off every 30 minutes hard on the hps and ballast?
What he saidWhat kind of light cycle do u use?
great info and very correct. I can speak from 1st hand experience with the computers. My cousin works in an office where they've had cpu's running 7-10 years straight. sometimes when they power off the DO never turn back on again.yes, the heat produced by the ballast when its on makes electronics and solder joints and parts "expand" slightly, then while off they cool and "contract" slightly...so the more you do this the higher the likelyhood of a failure, but keep in mind, cheap ballasts use cheap parts, and probably have cold solder joints that can easily detatch, more expensive ballasts use higher quality parts and are less prone to failures.
It's like a computer...I work in an environment that is very harsh on computer equipment...so in turn we get failures quite a bit...the machines that last the longest are the ones that never get powered off, and I've had several that once powered off, they never worked again