Hi Matthias,
Point taken (that is why I suggested that this was a "long shot" above)...in either case, it seems there's an approximate 30% loss in response in a bit less than four months as measured by peak area. Could be a dying lamp as well as the onset of solarization--or leak(s) or an ailing pump/transducer (flow too fast and measured pressure not accurately measured). Not enough of a history in terms of peak area response as a function of time to tell. Time period of observed decrease in peak area response and age of detector as well as optics are both unknown.
The onset of confirmed solarization in the optical benches of two Waters 474 and 2475 detectors were similar--both happened after about four years of aging in both cases, both of these detectors were used fairly constantly (about 70% of total elapsed calendar time--these were both used for amino acid work, fairly high throughput). Generally we replaced the Xenon lamps every 1500 hours of operation or so...but this could be a "lemon lamp" in LCFan's case. Heck, I just saw a 1200 Agilent VWD lamp "burn out" after only 600 hours of operation, and those are generally fine for 1500-2000 hours of operation, to your point. Nearly anything can and will happen with any manufacturer's hardware.
Whatever the Case, LCFan, I hope your troubles are over and if so, please could you let us know what happened to the FLD? Curiosity is getting the Best of Me...