Thanks Paul and Grainger for chiming in. Here is what I was doing. I am using a computer based Signal Generator, it comes with Pro Tools that I have and is running through an external sound card via RCA into the Seduction. One can choose the frequency, waveform and amplitude in dB. I checked the signal generator output voltage with my multimeter and started at a very low setting, somewhere around 5mV. The problem is that my Oscilloscope (Phillips PM3212, 25MHz) is not able to display a signal that is that low. It finally starts to register at a signal strength right around -40dB which is 26mV. I was feeding this 26mV 1kHz signal into the Seduction, ramping up the amplitude slowly until the sine wave would start to flatten out on top, which means its starting to distort. I thought it was a great way of telling the differences in tube gain for each tube. Anyways the signal that started to distort the tubes measured as follows: it starts to distort at -13dB input which measured 0.49V. At that input the Seduction output measured 32.8V. If I put the voltage difference into this online dB conversion calculator I get 30dB gain. I then started to check another pair of tubes and the results were different. So I guess every tube has its own gain character and the Oscilloscope was a great tool of making these differences visible.
Paul, do you think that this signal is too high for the Seduction?
And Grainger I still do not get your conversion from PtP to Rms. I found this online calculator and it is the same formula that I found in a book RMS is 0.3535 the peak to peak value. ?
Thanks
Stefan Hampel
Soundsmith Carmen, modded Technics SL-1200mkII, Thorens TD 125 mk2 with SME V, Eros, Extended Foreplay III, BeePre2, Crack, Pioneer Spec 4, Sonus Faber Electa