Reporting quick test of the "Taito Thereminmin"
[b]What do the oscillator controls do? Do they vary the timbre of the instrument?[/b]
There are 3 controls in the front of the unit.
The far left one from what I see, controls the volume, and the loop on the left of the unit has no effect.
The other two buttons are marked with 1 & 2.
I started with both at top/center. The unit produced very high tones. I adjusted the center one to the right, until I heard the tone drop in pitch, until it stopped. Then, when I broguht my hand near the antenna, I got some tone variation as expected.
The far right #2 button seemed to do a similar adjustment as the #1 button, varying it from high to low pitch, and even reversing the tone from low-to-high to high-to-low, if you adjust it past the low tone spot.
I'm fairly novice to the adjustment of theremins in general, so I may be mistaking some of my adjustments. I'll post the translations from the instruction sheet when I can.
[b]How large can you make the control zone (the sensitive area around the pitch rod (antenna) where sound occurs?)[/b]
The instructions that come with it, (In Japanese, I'm getting it translated.) show the zone to be 20cm, or about 8". I could get that range fairly easily, with most effective range within about 4".
[b]As you move your hand at a slow steady pace towards the pitch rod does the pitch change slowly at first and speed up exponentially as you get closer to the rod, much as the frets on a guitar get closer together for the higher notes?[/b]
Yes, it does rise in pitch as you described above, with the rate of change speeding up as you get closer. Also, it will flip-flop to high-to-low with the settings adjusted in a certian way.
[b](My thought is that around this time of year people visit Theremin World who are considering buying a theremin for Christmas, but are wavering over the price. They may well be minded to invest $20 to try out on a toy to see if they take to it before potentially wasting rather more. It is sensible that they be aware of how the toy varies from a grown-up theremin.)[/b]
I totally agree, it's best to know the full functionality of a unit before you make an investment. I've wanted a theremin for years, for both the science of it, as well as another instrument to try to master. So when I had the opportunity to carry these at our shop, I of course had to take a chance on these. So far, I'm pleased with the performance, and I'm very novice with it, having only ever tried a "real" theremin at our local museum that had one on display.
I also tried the grounding mod. I added a copper wire to the negative spring inside the base, and ran it out the cover. I stripped several inches of wire outside, and held on to it while testing the control range. I easily extended the zone from the 8" inches to at least 12", and will try a larger foil strip when I get home and get some foil, to see my maximum range I can tweak out of it.