It’s not mine or it would have a grid and plate current meter. I had to temporarily install a plate current meter outside the deck so I could get an idea of what going on. I did install a fuse inline with bias circuit. It now has a glitch too on B+. The one thing I never see on Russian datasheet is input impedance. Sure would make it easier.
As a side note, the fuse should have a "cutoff" value resistor in parallel with it, so that if it opens under load, this does not create a large spike in the voltage drop that would be on the cathode. The indirectly heated cathode does not have the best insulation between it and the filament. Since the cathode is effectively in series with the anode, an open in the cathode circuit while under load, causes the plate voltage to briefly want to drop across that path of least resistance. Placing some resistance across what would be an open, that can "hold" the tube in cutoff, prevents this voltage spike from causing internal tube arcs. Without that, if the fuse blows, you can tell by looking at it, that more than the rated 250 volts were placed across it!
The addition of the glitch resistor is perhaps the best, least expensive and easiest to install, protection that you can place inside a tube amp. By itself, it can save the tube from destruction under most fault conditions that would result in an internal tube arc. I managed to learn about both the fuse and glitch resistor in one of my first builds. When the gamma shorted at the antenna, it only cost me one of the two 8877 tubes in the amp... About $1,500 later, they got replaced with a matched pair of ruggedized, Eimac VX-1500 tubes, including glitch resistor, cathode fuse and second cutoff resistor, paralleled with that fuse. Almost thirty years later, it's still running on those tubes.
Needless to say, the parts required to prevent the $1,500 failure from happening in the first place, were less than $10.00.