philips1954 datasheet
-Vg = maximum 50V.
Vg(Ig=+0, 3uA) = max -1,3 V
Okay, there are those. However, these don't speak to maximum input signal which is what Colas wanted. So what do they describe?
The -50v maximum is provided in the same section as the 550v maximum plate voltage, so this is an
absolute value of voltage which is never to be exceeded under any circumstances. As I showed with the 12AX7 curves above, with 400v across the 12AX7 the tube cut off with -5v on the grid so the extra -45v that could be applied before reaching the absolute maximum don't really matter, do they?
What about the -1.3v max? Why have a maximum of V
g = -50v and also V
g = -1.3v? Notice in parentheses it says "
Ig = + 0.3uA". That means grid current is 3 microamps, which is close enough to "zero grid current" for you and me. If the grid is well-negative of the cathode, the grid looks to external circuitry like an open-circuit and does not flow any current. But this particular data sheet entry tells you that once the grid is 1.3v below cathode voltage, that grid current begins to flow; it will increase as the grid approaches the same voltage as the cathode (V
g=0v) or becomes positive of the cathode.
So if anything, you might interpret the -5v cutoff point I showed earlier and the -1.3v point for the onset of grid current to 3.7v peak-to-peak maximum possible input signal. But in reality, many circuits run the tube closer to V
g=0v because grid current stays small unless the grid goes positive of the cathode.
See how those don't directly state "maximum grid input"? At least not like you might think?