.........I'm sorry to say it, but I really don't think that I would have a great deal of success trying to measure the amplitude of the error signal at 20Hz or so!
Just to put some kind of perspective on things here, this amplifier has a loop gain characteristic that rises at a 100dB/decade rate (5-pole) with decreasing frequency from a starting point of 64dB at the top of the audio frequency spectrum (20 kHz).
This means that, at the lower end of the audio frequency spectrum (20 Hz), the loop gain reaches approximately 360dB. This is egual to a loop gain, expressed as Av, of 1000,000,000,000,000,000.
That is the "loop gain" - the actual open loop gain of the amplifier, at this point, is this figure multiplied by the feedback factor, which is ~20. So at 20Hz the open loop gain is 20,000,000,000,000,000,000.
The prototype amplifier clipps at 15W average ("rms") into a 4 ohm load, which equals ~11V peak. So, at the onset of clipping at 20 Hz the virtual earth error signal will be approximately equal to 11V / 20,000,000,000,000,000,000Av = 0.00000000000000000055V peak.
If I have my math right and haven't missed a zero here or there, that is equal to 550 zetta volts. Does anyone know if HP or Keithely ever made a zetta-voltmeter?
LTspice doesn't even have the computational resolution to compute the loop gain as DC is approached. It bombs out even before getting down to 20Hz: