Hi Buddy,
Way to go! It's more than I could do.
Your volume woes...
It could be an unsuitable amplifier. I just tried it on my unsuitable amplifier (a Fender 15R - intended for guitars - you really want one suitable for keyboards) and it does restrict the volume control as you describe.
Other symptoms are a very faint bleed-through - even with my hand right inside the volume loop I can hear a very faint ghost tone when I wave my other hand around the volume antenna, and a very distorted tone, increasingly distorted at higher volumes - turn the waveform knob fully clockwise and the brightness knob fully anticlockwise, the tone should be fairly soft and flute-like and not change as you increase the volume.
You could try plugging the etherwave into something with a line level input for comparison - the aux-in sockets on your hi-fi, for example, or the audio-in on your PC (but in either instance RTFM first to make sure it is line-level - and do not try plugging it into the microphone input on anything!)
If this is the problem, there is a modification you can make in the Customising section of the manual that came with the kit to lower the output level - just swapping one resistor for a higher value one.
Alternatively you can do as I did and buy a cheap low impedance inline volume pedal and feed the etherwave output through it (even swapping a single resistor is not an option for clumsy me, and this way you can remove the pedal if you want to swap from your amp to your PC for recording purposes, for instance. Also it will let you use cheap guitar effects pedals if that is your thing!)
Or it might be that you just need to adjust some of the trim pots or coils inside the machine. If they are anywhere as sensitive as the coils in my Kees Enkelaar theremin they are very sensitive indeed, and even the tiniest fraction of a turn can have a major effect. Check the manual.
Hope this helps.
Way to go! It's more than I could do.
Your volume woes...
It could be an unsuitable amplifier. I just tried it on my unsuitable amplifier (a Fender 15R - intended for guitars - you really want one suitable for keyboards) and it does restrict the volume control as you describe.
Other symptoms are a very faint bleed-through - even with my hand right inside the volume loop I can hear a very faint ghost tone when I wave my other hand around the volume antenna, and a very distorted tone, increasingly distorted at higher volumes - turn the waveform knob fully clockwise and the brightness knob fully anticlockwise, the tone should be fairly soft and flute-like and not change as you increase the volume.
You could try plugging the etherwave into something with a line level input for comparison - the aux-in sockets on your hi-fi, for example, or the audio-in on your PC (but in either instance RTFM first to make sure it is line-level - and do not try plugging it into the microphone input on anything!)
If this is the problem, there is a modification you can make in the Customising section of the manual that came with the kit to lower the output level - just swapping one resistor for a higher value one.
Alternatively you can do as I did and buy a cheap low impedance inline volume pedal and feed the etherwave output through it (even swapping a single resistor is not an option for clumsy me, and this way you can remove the pedal if you want to swap from your amp to your PC for recording purposes, for instance. Also it will let you use cheap guitar effects pedals if that is your thing!)
Or it might be that you just need to adjust some of the trim pots or coils inside the machine. If they are anywhere as sensitive as the coils in my Kees Enkelaar theremin they are very sensitive indeed, and even the tiniest fraction of a turn can have a major effect. Check the manual.
Hope this helps.