What kind of meter are you using?
I suspect your meter is loading the circuit to create a confusing reading. If your circuit is a copy of the original 5E3, then pin 7 is the grid of the phase inverter, and it should not sit at zero volts. Unfortunately I don't believe the 20 volts either. I really wouldn't worry much that the 70v has become 55, but try this. Instead of measuring voltage from pin 7 to ground, instead measure the voltage from pin7 to pin 8. Don't measure each to ground and calculate4, measire directly between the pins. If pin 8 is at 55v, then I bet there will be something like 1.5 volts between pin 7 and 8. You may not be able to measure it to ground directly, but that would mean the voltage at pin 7 was really 53.5.
V1 may have some voltages, but the circuits at V2 are different, so whatever is on V1 doesn;t apply to V2.
"Preamp tubes" are not generic, so don;t expect them all to be the same in a circuit. Just as a thin piece of wire could be an E string on your guitar, or it could be part of a cheese cutter. It is the use of something that determines what it is. SO a 12AX7 tube in V1 has no bearing on a 12AX7 as V2.
In the other hand you asked what they are normally biased to. Well, if you have 55 volts on the cathode and 53 volts on the grid, then that tube is biased vy 2 volts just as surely as one with 2v on the cathode and zero on the grid. Bias is the relationship of grid to cathode, not the relationship of either of those to ground.
I suspect your meter is loading the circuit to create a confusing reading. If your circuit is a copy of the original 5E3, then pin 7 is the grid of the phase inverter, and it should not sit at zero volts. Unfortunately I don't believe the 20 volts either. I really wouldn't worry much that the 70v has become 55, but try this. Instead of measuring voltage from pin 7 to ground, instead measure the voltage from pin7 to pin 8. Don't measure each to ground and calculate4, measire directly between the pins. If pin 8 is at 55v, then I bet there will be something like 1.5 volts between pin 7 and 8. You may not be able to measure it to ground directly, but that would mean the voltage at pin 7 was really 53.5.
V1 may have some voltages, but the circuits at V2 are different, so whatever is on V1 doesn;t apply to V2.
"Preamp tubes" are not generic, so don;t expect them all to be the same in a circuit. Just as a thin piece of wire could be an E string on your guitar, or it could be part of a cheese cutter. It is the use of something that determines what it is. SO a 12AX7 tube in V1 has no bearing on a 12AX7 as V2.
In the other hand you asked what they are normally biased to. Well, if you have 55 volts on the cathode and 53 volts on the grid, then that tube is biased vy 2 volts just as surely as one with 2v on the cathode and zero on the grid. Bias is the relationship of grid to cathode, not the relationship of either of those to ground.
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