"yes Fred, you'll baffle me I'm sure but go ahead anyway :)" - Chris
LOL - No, you have baffled me!
(as has Thierry a bit with his posting) - It gets to the point where one doesnt know what to believe with the stories one hears - More and more I realize that I can only trust what I have seen for my self - And with theremins, can I even trust that ? LOL ;-)
1.) To me, getting the oscillators stable has never been the major problem - the problem has been the equalizing coil / circuit - I think the ferrite is probably a bigger contributor the thermal variation than anything else.
2.) I had a fairly detailed discussion with someone some years ago who I believed to be really "in the know" about the Henk theremins, and was told that the one problem which bugged Anthony Henk and his theremins more than any other was thermal drift - The implication (it might even have been said) was that this problem was a major factor in him abandoning the theremin
This person knew Anthony personally.. Like I say though, you never know in the theremin community whether one is hearing the truth.
3.) As I understand it, The T-Vox does not have an equalizing inductance.. So I wonder if this could be another reason for its stability?
4.) If equalizing inductance change due to temperature is a major factor (as I think it probably is) in theremin thermal drift, then the extra cost to fix this problem is not cents - these are probably the most expensive parts in a theremin.. Even good ferrites like the Hammond inductors are expensive - Air coils would probably double the cost of an EW.
But, as with all things theremin, we will probably never get any definitive answers - And it is probably a complete waste of effort to seek answers, as so few care as to make it pointless..
Herein lies the difference between a luthier and a theremin engineer - The luthier has hundreds of years of "the art" to refer to, with established theory and little nonsense. The theremin engineer has a few decades to look back on, and most of the information (even that of the "Stradavarius" which was wrongly detailed by those who first documented it) isnt worth the paper it was written on.
Add to this the mythology which has been deliberately created to promote the theremin as something it is not, and something it never could and never can be (starting right back with RCA's BS about it being a really easy - perhaps the easiest instrument to play) - combine this with the populations ignorance, and one has everything in place for confusion which can be exploited... Add a goddess and a "RCA switch" and you have the technical joke of the century!
Fred.