I forget which it is, UVA or UVB that is the catalyst for drying linseed oil. If the lamp doesn't do the right one, it won't do you any good.
Some time ago, I was fooling around with black lights to try to help things along. They DO help....a little. Mostly my problem with slow drying was with my oil/varnish, and not with light. I'm still experimenting.
Drying time depends upon more than just light. If you have raw linseed oil, for instance, you can put it on wood and leave it in a warm dry room, and it probably won't dry for years. Sunlight, and lots of it, is an absolute requirement. We're still talking several days, if not weeks, of full sunlight to really dry each thin coat. Mark gave the reason to never "flood and soak" wood with linseed oil. The oil will only dry on the very outside, and all the oil inside will not want to dry at all. When you see people say "I hate linseed oil, why, I put linseed oil on a stock, and once I got out in the rain, and all the oil and the stain ran off", this is why. (it's also a good reason to stay away from aniline dyes!
) They slopped the oil on and never let it dry.
Start adding drying agents, and boiling the oil, and you start getting it to dry more quickly, without quite so much necessity of sunlight (though it still helps a LOT!). I'm not certain yet, but I believe that boiling the oil does more to aid drying than the addition of drying agents. I need to test that out. As I understand it, boiling the oil oxidizes it, and basically "pre dries" it, so you won't have to wait so long after you put it on the wood for it to dry.
For my linseed oil (in-the-wood) finish, I have stuff that is boiled for about an hour or so, and is THICK. Lead carbonate and burnt Umber (for the manganese) added. Dries like you wouldn't believe. It will film over in the jar in just a day....inside, no sun. For an oil finish, this is great. I don't need a smooth finish, and am not worried about the oil leveling on the surface, as I'm gonna cut it all off with a coarse cloth later anyway.
For varnish, though, I've found I can't really easily use a concoction this thick. It's just too thick and sticky. No matter how much turpentine I cut it back with. Oh, it works, but it's mighty hard to get a smooth surface, as it gets tacky immediately. Can't smooth it out. Here's where I really need to work on my "perfected" formula... If I don't boil it very long, it stays smooth and light, and it flows and levels BEAUTIFULLY...but it takes FOREVER to dry. I mean forever. I have to find the happy medium... For my next batch of varnish, I think I'm going to boil the oil for about 45 minutes, stop, and let it cool enough to where I can tell how thick it's going to be. If I think I can go a little longer without it getting too thick, I'll turn 'er back on again and boil for a few minutes longer and add my resins. I'm going to try this time to not use any added drying agents. We'll see how it does. Maybe I can get the "perfect" varnish that stays fluid and levels well, but still dries in a reasonable amount of time.