> There's a chance the lights might also derive from this.
If the light is flickering it's absolutely guaranteed that it's derived from this.
But it's hard to imagine a lightbulb that emits a short enough pulse of light to make something look stopped. Even an absolute garbage one-way rectifier will be emitting light more than a quarter of the time. That can make a tool look odd, but it won't make it look still.
If the light is flickering it's absolutely guaranteed that it's derived from this.
Not necessarily. If it's a 50/60 or 100/120 Hz flicker then yes, but LED lights with a cheap switching power supply might still flicker at the switching frequency, which could be say 400Hz or something.
You have to be intentionally wasting money to put in a transformer big enough to handle 400Hz, and once you get into the lots of KHz where a supply like that is happy I think your "please don't explode" capacitor on the transformer is enough to prevent flicker.
If the light is flickering it's absolutely guaranteed that it's derived from this.
But it's hard to imagine a lightbulb that emits a short enough pulse of light to make something look stopped. Even an absolute garbage one-way rectifier will be emitting light more than a quarter of the time. That can make a tool look odd, but it won't make it look still.