If you want to prove it, if you have a 24V 5W lamp, you can connect this to the 16V DC output. If it blows, you have a lot more than 24V. But if as expected, it glows with a yellow medium brightness (but not really bright white light), the 16V output if fine. You can of course connect the meter up as well to test the voltage.
In the UK, suitable lamps can be had from shops and garages that stock spare lamps for cars, vans and trucks.
No need for a lamp holder, either solder the wires to the existing solder terminals or hold them on with "stretched tight" insulation tape (it does depend on the type of lamp you get). Just be careful not to cause a short circuit.
Even if you don't do this, the presence of some AC voltage on the 16V DC line does not matter, as the original MTX PSU supplied 22V AC anyway.
Of course, the normal "it's not my fault if you connect up your MTX and then find it glows brighter than the Sun" warning applies
Mark

Standby alert

“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb

Autumn is here. Bye bye summer 2024...
Not as many MTXs as Dave!
