The issue is "Emission testers". These were NEVER good tests. Especially for small-signal tubes like 12AX7, and the BIG signal tubes like EL34 in guitar-amp duty.
The ONLY excuse for Emission Test is that it is cheap and it will quickly find high-high-hour tubes which are actually worn. When you pull 23 tubes out of a TV set that has run 9 hours a night 7 nights a week, there is a good chance of finding a "dead" or "weak" tube, which -might- actually be a problem.
Hmmmmm..... ya know, those cheap testers are -biased- to read "poor". The main use was to test used tubes and SELL new tubes. Whether an actual radio-repair shop (who does not mind replacing tubes) or the Drugstore Tube Tester with a rack of new FOR SALE tubes underneath.
I have an emission tester. Might be a Mighty Mite. It found a hot-short in an old tube, saved an amp's butt. I tap the emission test button and see if the meter moves -anywhere- near the "OK" zone; complete lack of reading means I mis-set the switches, the tube-type, or the tube is totally dead. But I don't give a hoot if the reading is only halfway up to "OK"; I know that most audio systems will never require "full emission".
And prolonged "emission testing" WILL damage the tube.
You could plausably decline to accept returns which have been through an Emission Tester. The tube may have been fine before they "tested" it for an hour.
It can be hard to know what kind of tester the customer used. You might simply refuse returns based -only- on a tube-tester reading.
I still say: breadboard a Champ so you can probe cathode voltages. If most 12AX7 show 1.5V-1.7V, and you got one which reads 0.9V, it is dubious. AND if it reads 1.6V but hisses like a snake-worship church, sumthin's wrong. You can put 12AT7 and 12AU7 in the same socket; the "normal" voltage will be different and gain will be down, but way-out tubes will be obvious when compared with others. All the Octal Audio Power tubes will "work" in a Champ's 6V6 socket if you wire it right. True, a 6550 may run fine at happy-6V6 11W and turn sick at 41W, but that's rare.
OTOH; New Sensor "should" understand that most of the market is ignorant idiots. They "should" gimmick the tubes so that they read "OK" on the $19 Sencore Cheapo tester.
BTW, IIRC: the pair of Sovtek 6550s I got from you had handwritten numbers which appeared to be current and transconductance. That told me that someone had lit them up with specific G1 G2 P voltages, read current, and wiggled to read transconductance. To me, this is first-order PROOF the tube was "good" when tested. I don't know what the "right" numbers should be (I don't know what the the test conditions were), but I am sure that if they tested a run and got 61 63 58 13 60 210 66... that the "13" and "210" tubes would be culled-out.