The output stage has 100K resistance between each grid and ground--that's 91K fixed resistance and the rest is accounted for in the grid stopper and bias/balance scheme.
Ok, now I want to make sure I understand the HF-89 bias circuit.
The PT has a 75V bias winding. The diode and the first cap act as a negative peak detector, yielding -105V.
The 2 10K pots are in parallel, so combined with the 10K resistor form a 15K resistor that then neatly forms a 50% voltage divider with the 15K resistor that goes to ground. Each pot gives a range of -52.5 to -42V -- with the pot turned all the one way, the divider is 15K / 15K, and all the way the other way it's 15K / 10K.
NOW, on to the balancing network... Again, a voltage divider. For this example, let's assume we're being fed -47V from our tap on the bias supply. But the balance network is a little tricker... With the balance pot right in the center, seems like we have a divider formed by th 25K on each wide of the wiper and the corresponding 100K resistor, which would yield -37.6 for each tube. Pot rotated all the way towards one extreme, one tube has no divider at all, really, and gets the full -47V, and the other gets -31V or so. At 25% rotation it would instead be one tube would have -41.7V and the other -34V. I feel like I have must part of this wrong, because it's only linear for a very tight range in the middle of the pot's rotation.
Anyway, for dead center, it seems correct... I don't know what the typical bias voltage is for the HF-89, but looking at the EL34 data sheet, -37.6 seems completely plausible.
So, it seems like you could adjust the Eico balance network a bit to get the total grid circuit resistance in line with spec, so long as the ratios between the pot and the resistors were kept the same?
