Sorry
but I think you are wrong about that. A failing part draws more power at the moment of failure causing it to melt, that's what a short is. A vacuum tube draws more power on the failing end, it glows the brightest just before it winks out. A short which is the failure of a heating element is a process of direct contact to ground with no resistance , infinite current, definite failure.
You cannot punch a hole in chromalux like that with
less current , only more current than the material was designed to handle.
"when a heating element starts to fail and then fails it is drawing LESS current" I think you are thinking of an aging element who's resistance increases, as the resistance increases the running temperature climbs causing the oxidized terminals.
P=I^2R , as the resistance climbs in the tube, holding the voltage constant ( i.e. as the tube ages) the power output ( or running temperature in this case) increases.
Failure is a catastrophic event that happens quite quickly.
"the tube was dying it drew too much current and stressed the contacts causing them to corrode"
I probably said that wrong before , What I should have said was: "when the tube was dying it
was running hotter than design" and that stressed the contacts".
But the failure was an eventual short to ground.
[this post was last edited: 11/19/2015-20:58]
