Do you happen to know the efficiency ranges that were common with the original generations of tube transmitters like the gigantic RCA 50A and 50B? I had a look through a
few historical pages on them but other than mentions of individual tube characteristics, I saw nothing about total kW in versus total kW out.
Obviously it varied by brand. An Ampliphase had different efficiencies than a high level plate modulated rig.
I am guessing, based on decades of building, installing and maintaining 1 kw to 10 kw AMs in the 60's and 70's that all are in the 40% to 60% efficiency range.
Radio's pioneers choosing the term carrier always perplexed me because the carrier doesn't
literally carry (in the sense of conveying) the audio. Maybe it's a chicken vs. egg thing, but it's the act of rapidly changing (distorting) a carrier's amplitude or frequency that generates the sum and difference frequency products that are the upper and lower sidebands that in turn are the spectral clones of the audio that dictated those very changes to its amplitude/frequency in the first place. Suppress that carrier afterward and you still have your audio as DSSC, or USB/LSB if you also remove a sideband. Somehow it would have made more sense had they called carriers pilots -- the same as they did with FM's DSSC stereo's carrier after halving its frequency to 19 kHz.
But the fact is that, until we got into hybrid systems in the late 70's, a typical AM rig had an oscillator and RF driver system and an audio amplification system. A typical 1 kw rig had 2 4-400A audio tubes in push-pull and two RF tubes of the same kind to create 1kw of carrier.
So put the RF driver and audio stage at about 300 watts, including heat, and the fans at about 600 watts and the tubes at their rated efficiency and you have about 2,400 watts consumption if the station was using fairly decent audio processing.
What many don't "get" is that the transmitter site might use over twice the transmitter power consumption in heating or cooling, exhaust fans, tower lighting, the equipment rack with remote control, whatever STL system was used, a peak limiter and such. Many of us had voltage regulators that were lossy if the power line was not stable, and we had lights on the outside of the building and, sometimes, around the lot, for security. Some had a second transmitter on hot standby with filaments on at all times, ready to switch.