John, the PVL produces approx .5floz per pull. Every lever pulls differently in both subtle technique and volume.
Since you only own one lever that I know of, and that lever is a PVL, you need to do 1 x preinfusion pull followed by 2 x pulls to get a full extraction of approx 1floz. As I said earlier, every coffee, every grind setting, every age difference, roast level, humidity, phase of the moon and type of socks you are wearing will create some mior differences but...
It's .5floz per pull.
In case you need to hear it from someone else:
http://www.home-barista.com/levers/pavoni-pro-and-ponte-vecchio-export-t4863-10.html "Some observations:
The Pavoni group is much more prone to overheat - it is much smaller than the Ponte Vecchio group, having no spring to contain. Also the taller, narrower PV group has a higher surface area:volume ratio, promoting cooling.
Shot volume of one pull of the Pavoni lever = two-three pulls of the Ponte Vecchio - depends on grind and dose in each. The Ponte Vecchio double basket (45 mm) appears to hold quite a bit more coffee than the 49 mm Pavoni. This is based on volume, not weight, and needs to be confirmed. If correct, this translates to a Ponte Vecchio cup that has considerable more coffee solids per unit volume of water. Thus the PV is pulling more of a ristretto (i.e. greater coffee:water ratio). To match this ratio on the Pavoni I need to stop the pull before it hits bottom.
The Pavoni baskets like their headroom - can't seem to get consistent results if I dose close to the top. At the dose that seems right, I need to stop the pull at about 1 oz espresso (and this happens to approximate the Ponte Vecchio coffee:water ratio of a two-pull, 1-oz shot). The difference here is that I can increase the dose in the Ponte Vecchio, which requires basically zero headroom, and get three or four pull shots that will near 2 oz (a traditional doppio.
Given I've spent two years with the PV and two weeks with the LP, these should be considered preliminary findings. I'll continue to post as I go..."