I should have added that... I'm thinking about selling some of them.
If you are selling, you need a FANCY NAME BRAND tester.
Do most ePay sellers who say they test actually test? Maybe, maybe not. And what does it mean?
This has come up on another forum.
The guys there who buy old-production tubes only buy from sellers who provide Gm and idle current measurements for the tubes they're selling. The buyers understand what those numbers mean, and they have the gear to test it themselves and so they verify the performance of their new purchases.
There are other folks who might buy from sellers with less-detailed test results, but they're not gonna pay "old tube prices." They're gonna pay "a little over new tube prices, before the pandemic."
If you're going the route of selling, I wouldn't bother with a home-brew tester, because the big-$$$ is not going to trust those results (even if they're 100% accurate).
I've always "viewed" a tube tester as a GO/NOGO box, anything more needs testing "in circuit"
The lab-grade setups are very much more than a GO/NO-GO test, and give everything a data sheet says & more. There is some interpretation required to understand the results, and setup/test time is long. But you can literally compare test results against data sheet conditions (and use data sheet conditions to establish the test parameters).
But nothing does gain/noise tests as well as using a real amp circuit.
If you measure in-circuit gain with a real amp circuit, you will likely also find out that tubes that measure very different on the tester don't perform that different in the amp (because cathode bias pulls the tubes towards an "average behavior" in a way that fixed bias doesn't).
... someone that tested tubes locally. He said he charged $20/tube. ...
And he probably hasn't made more than $20 or $40, because no one is gonna bother paying absurd prices like that.
... Maybe I should just buy a tester to test my tubes. Then I could start a "business" testing tubes for $10. Then I can sell the tester when I made enough to cover my losses. :-D
The testers people want to see mentioned in ads will run you $700-1k in good refurbished/calibrated condition. The lower priced ones that don't claim a recent calibration might be like getting "a deal" on a used car...