I began work on the Jaycar MIDI theremin kit last night.
All I can say is, this kit is definitely not for beginners. There are a zillion little tiny pins to solder in place very close to each other. I've gotten fairly adept at soldering, and I still had to de-solder some of them and redo the work. The construction is fairly difficult, and the instructions are particularly vague in some parts. (There's about a paragraph of text to describe how to assemble one entire circuit board, for example.) I'm managing okay because I know what I'm doing at this point and have professional advice on hand anyway, but I expect a beginner would be completely lost.
The kit has three circuit boards. One is pre-assembled, which is the LCD panel. I finished the easier of the other two last night, and made a small start on the third, which is the main board. The main board of the Jaycar MIDI theremin alone is significantly more complex than the entirety of the Jaycar Silicon Chip Theremin Mark 1.
Almost all of the connectors and controls are also soldered directly onto the boards. This makes things somewhat difficult if you want to replace the cheap plastic case with something significantly different. I haven't decided how to deal with that yet.
All I can say is, this kit is definitely not for beginners. There are a zillion little tiny pins to solder in place very close to each other. I've gotten fairly adept at soldering, and I still had to de-solder some of them and redo the work. The construction is fairly difficult, and the instructions are particularly vague in some parts. (There's about a paragraph of text to describe how to assemble one entire circuit board, for example.) I'm managing okay because I know what I'm doing at this point and have professional advice on hand anyway, but I expect a beginner would be completely lost.
The kit has three circuit boards. One is pre-assembled, which is the LCD panel. I finished the easier of the other two last night, and made a small start on the third, which is the main board. The main board of the Jaycar MIDI theremin alone is significantly more complex than the entirety of the Jaycar Silicon Chip Theremin Mark 1.
Almost all of the connectors and controls are also soldered directly onto the boards. This makes things somewhat difficult if you want to replace the cheap plastic case with something significantly different. I haven't decided how to deal with that yet.