100217-0751 EST
Kamakazi:
Connect your Fluke meter with min-max monitoring to an outlet with one of the lights you see flickering, actually a momentary dip or a sustained dip not flickering, and report back what min and max voltages you see.
Flickering as a descriptor of light problems is probably better used to describe a random uncorrelated change in light intensity that likely would be a result of one or more bad connections. This would derive from the use of flicker in describing a flickering candlelight,
Tungsten filament incandescent lamp light intensity is quite sensitive to small changes in applied voltage. I can visually detect a change of 1.5 V at 120 V when watching a 15 W bulb.
Many CFLs (compact fluorescent lamp) have little sensitivity to voltage change. In particular the GE dimmable has less sensitivity to voltage variations than standard CFLs when supplied from a sine wave source, and the standard CFL is less sensitive to voltage changes than an incandescent. The GE dimmable is adjustable with a phase shift dimmer, a delayed turn-on sine wave, but when supplied with a variable sine wave it has little change down to about 100 V and then just quits.
An 8' Slimline that I have with a magnetic ballast has about 5% change in light intensity form 100 to 130 V.
See my plots of light intensity vs voltage at
http://beta-a2.com/EE-photos.html
In particular photos P 9, 11,14, 15, and 17.
.