Hey guys, I know just enough to get in trouble.

I have a B&K 707 tester. Two of the basic tests are with buttons labeled Shorts and Grid Emission. When a tube is good, an indicator needle remains fixed, but when bad it swings into the Reject area. More detail is found in the manual which states "Gas, grid emission, or even obscure grid-to-cathode leakage are all disclosed by an exceptionally sensitive grid current check. This test will reveal as little as 2 or 3 micro amperes of current in the grid circuit."
Not being an expert in electronics or vacuum tubes I simply go by what the B&K tells me. And since the test button is labeled Grid Emission, that is what I reported when it failed, rather than the longer definition quoted above. One of the two NOS tubes passed both Shorts and Emission button tests, the other failed the latter. Because I don't know more about electronics I'm not inclined to use any tube that fails either test.
