Thanks for doing the math! That's helpful.
I still wonder how lower frequencies would be treated. Of course tonestack settings would matter. Maybe vol too???
From: "Servicing Radio and Television with a Vacuum Tube Voltmeter", Copyright 1951, Sylvania Electric Products Inc.:
3.3 SIGNAL LEVEL MEASUREMENTS IN AUDIO AMPLIFIERS. . .The entire test should he repeated at a low and high frequency (such as 100 and 10,000 cycles), in addition to the 1000-cycle frequency employed in the foregoing series. This will enable the technician to determine whether amplification is uniform throughout the audio spectrum. If the amplifier has a tone control, separate tests should he made at various settings of that control. A stage-by-stage signal voltage measurement of this kind is a dynamic test of the amplifier and should follow the complete dc and ac voltage measurements described in Sections 3.1 and 3.2 of this Chapter. The signal voltage test will isolate defective stages quickly and will even disclose bad tubes. The whole series of voltage measurements described thus far in this Chapter form the basis of a complete trouble shooting procedure. They may appear unnecessarily laborious, but after a reasonable amount of practice, they may he performed in a routine manner with complete ease.
3.4 TONE CONTROL TESTS
Connect the Polymeter, set to AC VOLTS, across the speaker voice coil or across a substitution load resistor (as described in Section 3.3). Set the amplifier volume control at about 1/2 maximum. Connect an audio oscillator to the amplifier input terminals, as shown in Figure 3-2. If the amplifier is a low-gain unit, dispense with the signal voltage divider and use the oscillator output control to adjust the input signal to a comfortable level. Adjust the maximum input signal to approximately 1 millivolt if the amplifier is high-gain. Set the tone control to its bass position. Starting at about 50 cycles, increase the oscillator frequency in regular steps up to 10,000 cycles, recording the output voltage (as indicated by the Polymeter) at each frequency setting. Keep the input signal voltage constant. Draw a frequency-vs-output voltage curve from the
data obtained. Next, set the tone control to its middle position and repeat the frequency run as before. Finally, set the tone control to its treble position and repeat the frequency run. The three curves obtained will show completely the performance of the amplifier in each position of the tone control. The technician will he able to see at a glance which hand of frequencies is emphasized and which is muted by the tone control, also where cutoff points are located.