Update: I ended up buying the eBay board listed above and thought i would share my thoughts as it may be of interest to others.
The basic kit includes the circuit board, LCD display, two pots, momentary push switch, and a neon indicator.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/260906425038The PCB requires 9-11vac so i used a dual tap 5v transformer wired in series for 10v. For the heater supply i bought a 6.3v 10va transformer from the same seller.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/261321178012The tube sockets, enclosure, and everything else you have to do yourself. I built mine to test 6DN7, 12AU7, and 1S4/3S4 family of tubes. Testing just about any tube is possible once you build a suitable heater supply and wire up the socket.
How does it work? Step 1: You power up without any tubes and set the Plate voltage and Grid voltage using the two pots. For the values you can either use the "average characteristics" values listed in the datasheet, or look at the "average plate characteristics" chart and pick the voltages you want to test at. Step 2: Plug in the tube and power up again and give it a minute or two for the tube to warm up and press the "test" button to measure the output current.
In terms of accuracy it seems very close to the datasheet values, generally a healthy tubes reads slightly higher. All the 6DN7 tubes read higher for Section 2 so i'm not convinced about the datasheets accuracy there, or maybe i'm reading it wrong which is entirely possible. Here are a few examples..
3S4: Datasheet average characteristics state: 67.5v plate, -7v grid = ~7.2-7.4ma
Six tubes tested were all ~8-9ma.
6DN7: Datasheet average characteristics state: Section 1: 250v plate, -8v grid = 8ma / Section 2: 250v plate, -9.5v grid = 41ma
Six tubes tested were all ~8ma for Section 1 / ~60ma for Section 2. A known bad tubes tested 5.9ma / 57ma.
I forgot to write down the values for the 12AU7's but i do remember a new Chinese tube measuring something like 15ma/8ma instead of the nominal 10.5ma listed in the datasheet, and a Brimar was 9.5ma on both sides. A crack owner could literally drive themselves crazy looking for tubes that match on both channels
Conclusion: A very versatile bit of kit that allows you to test the health of a tube, match them yourself, and plot the characteristics if you are so inclined. Most important for me was its a fraction of the cost of a real tester, overall i estimate it cost me ~€120 to build so great value for money, and a fun project too..