The answers I give below may not be correct - they are my best guess at this time:
[i]"would this box come out more or less expensive for someone then just upgrading to the plus and getting some modules? If it is more expensive does it offer more options or do something better?" - dae23 [/i]
The box should be a LOT cheaper than modules (VCO+VCF+VCA) and does not need the plus upgrade.
I believe that the + upgrade and good modules will be better than the box - it will have more options and would allow all the sound synthesiser functions provided by the modules .. but one is probably talking about £200+ to achieve this.. I expect the box to be (probably a lot) less than £100 parts cost.
[i]" Maybe a box with knobs and in/out jacks that mounts on the mic stand just below the E-wave." - dae23 [/i]
This would be a good place for it - Anywhere accessible which does not interfere with the Theremin fields.
[i]"As in, if your theremin has a linear volume response then one should use an exponential VCA. Is this correct and if so, does anyone know the Etherwave Standards response?" - dae23 [/i]
We percieve sound level exponentially - doubling the [b]power[/b] from an audio amplifier does not sound like a doubling of loudness - the percieved increase in loudness is probably about 10%. However.. We are FAR more sensitive to pitch change than we are to volume change, so this is not nearly so critical.
The present EW VCA is nearly linear as far as I can see.. So if one is happy with the EW volume response, then a linear VCA should be fine.
[i]"- If one were to attempt to synthesize the classic theremin tone (RCA, Rockmore - Golden tone? Impossible, I'm sure ;) Has anyone thought about the waveform makeup more than I have? Sine, Triangle? How it changes over pitch and amplitude? I know the "Claramin" was a special case, though." - dae23 [/i]
Yes - People have played with dynamics to hone the Theremin sound on analogue synths - I think Kevin Kissinger is probably the best person to give advice on this.
[i]"And one more for fun.
- Could someone, using a ring modulator, some oscillators, and filters,
make a crude heterodyning oscillator to be played on a keyboard (maybe even with a CV theremin)? For no paticular reason,
just because you can." - dae23 [/i]
No. Not unless the oscillators were tuned to > about 50kHz and the ring modulator and following filters could handle the resulting frequencies.. Even IF the above was ok (which it wont be) one needs some fancy modifications to the variable oscillator.. The 1V/octave frequency change will NOT give a 1V/octave difference frequency out..
in My heterodyning VCO, this was (and to an extent still is) the biggest technical challenge in the design.
Example: Reference oscillator = 200kHz
with 0V CV, tune variable oscillator to (say) 200.032kHz (32Hz difference).. Now, in a normal VCO, adding 1V to the CV would double the VCO frequency .. With this VCO, only the DIFFERENCE frequency must be doubled, to take it up to 200.064kHz.. Difficult enough to achieve - but extremely difficult because one needs to incorperate the exponential converter and only work on a fraction of the actual oscillator frequency - I have not yet got perfect tracking - but it is as good as some VCO's. Perfect tracking is not essential for the Theremin, but it is essential if the CV is also going to drive other VCOs as well.
[i]"If you have a pure sinewave and get rid of the distortion, as Fred keeps talking about, you will end up with an instrument that sounds like a Tvox or a Theremax, both of which sound nothing like the original tube instruments. The Ethervox in it's current state sounds much more like the originals."- Eitherspiel [/i]
Has anyone actually run a spectum analyser on signals from the "original" tube theremins and compared these to the EW?
I suspect that, if one was to examine spect