No (AVS) and no (Sunny). Azimuth adjustment is not about output per channel. It is about crosstalk. Although you can in theory at least use a 'scope to do azimuth, it is more complex than you might think (first you normalize the output of one channel vs the other and then you look at the amount of the L channel signal that appears in the R channel, and vice-versa) and requires filters so you can look at one frequency at a time, and of course a proper test LP. Same goes for using a voltmeter. That's why they get the big bucks for the Fozgometer or the Feickert device (which I like better in theory). Re the FFT business: I don't know much about that, but I do know that there are now applications that you can download onto your laptop that turn it into a frequency analyzer for very little money compared to the cost of a modern digital storage 'scope with FFT. (Actually, the Feickert program does that too.)