Why would you want hundreds of volts of swing? I suppose the signal must not be too weak but why would such high voltages be useful?" - edanielf
"High voltages will help swamp outside interfering noise sources (increase SNR). Not sure if anyone has studied this, but it makes sense. Using a linearizing inductor (like the EWS design) can jack this up even higher at the antenna" - Dewster
"Not sure if anyone has studied this".. I have not "studied" this, but I have expierienced the difference that the tank / antenna amplitudes make - In my first ventures, I did not see any relevance in the amplitude - I was used to short distance capacitive sensor design with plate amplitudes of 5V or even less, and they worked fine..
Based on this I developed an extremely complex multi-antenna instrument (Epsilon) and on the bench, with modules spread out, things seemed to be working.. As soon as the pieces were put together in an enclosure, all hell broke loose..
The impedence at the antenna needs to be high for the sensor to work over any reasonable distance - High impedence and low signal levels means that other signals can couple easily into the antenna, and even if this coupling only has a tiny effect on the waveform at the antenna, this can / will affect the cycle-by-cycle period of the oscillator - leading to frequency jitter and all sorts of other nasties.. My digital circuitry was coupling back to the antennas and screwing everything up.
There are some really strong radiated signals from common appliances - strong 30kHz (ish) signals radiated from "eco" light bulbs, some of which have strong harmonics up into the MHz, and other signals from other appliances which, although usually greatly attenuated by the time (distance) they get to the antenna will still cause oscillator jitter if the amplitude of the oscillator signal at the antenna is "low"..
I think it is a proportional thing - I think that all theremin oscillators will be affected to some extent by interference from external signals - But I think that the jitter may be proportional to the reletive amplitudes of the oscillator signal and the interfering signal - if this is the case, then the higher the oscillator amplitude on the antenna, the lower the jitter.
I dont think one needs to go to hundreds of volts to get better-than-acceptable immunity from interference - IME 100V P-P is better-than-acceptable , and 50V P-P is acceptable for most moderately noisy environments - Even 25V P-P is usually fine.. But go lower than this and I think you start to increase you chances of having problems. One shouldnt get silly and go too high - its a theremin you want, not a Tesla coil ;-) having lightening bolts jumping from your antenna probably aint a comfortable way to play!
Also, if you place a capacitor between the linearizing coil and the antenna, remember that this needs a voltage rating higher than the maximum voltage the antenna can attain.
There is one other aspect which I have observed - One gets a slight increase in sensing distance when the amplitude on the antenna is increased - I think this may be due to an increase in the space-charge arround the antenna having more 'density' due to the conductivity of the air around it - This is pure hypothesis on my part, but I wonder if the depth of this field changes the effective area (diameter) of the antenna - probably only by < 1mm, but enough to cause drift when the properties (humidity and temperature particularly) of the air local to the antenna changes.. I have found that low voltage 'antennas' seem to have less drift due to environmental changes than those with really high voltage amplitudes on them.
Fred.