[i]"I have an old jaycar theremin, well from the jaycar design but built from scratch, with some of the mods mentioned in this forum. It is not a great instrument but playable. I was exited when my neighbour siad he had the new MKII Jaycar (2009 project) I have put it together and it seems OK so far. However when I put the lid on the volume gradually drops away. It looks like a bad design having the speaker magnet so near the coils. Has any one seen this problem? Does anyone have any comments on the MKII design?"[/i]
Magnetic fields CAN severely affect the tuning of the coils (IF Transformers) in the S/C / Jaycar theremins. What happens can be easily demonstrated by trying to tune an IFT with a magnetized screw driver.. the screw driver does not even need to touch the slug - one can hear tuning change as it gets within 10mm of the can!
Try connecting a flying lead to the speaker, and removong it from the vicinity while you put the lid on.. this will prove / disprove whether the speaker is the problem.
If it behaves without the speaker, this is NOT proof that magnetic fields are the problem - The speaker also acts as a large grounded (capacitively coupled) object which can upset tuning..
To eliminate this as the cause, you need to construct a dummy speaker (plastic bowl or packing foam shaped aprox like the speaker, wrap this in aluminium foil, connect this to ground.. fit lid with this dummy speaker - If the theremin stays in tune (or the volume circuit works) with this lid fitted, then you can be almost certain that the magnetic field from the speaker is the cause of the problem..
How to fix it? (A) Try to move the board or speaker so that IFT's are away from the speaker..
(B) Put speaker socket on case and have speaker external (C) Forget the speaker, just use line out (4) Build a bigger box, place speaker on the base (facing down) next to the PCB, so that there is no possibility of field interference.
It is also a good idea to mount the board upside down, and have holes in the bottom of the box for adjusting the IFT's.
And yeah - not too clever to design a theremin with large permanent magnet close to ferrite tuning slugs.. ;-) .. It is possible sometimes, with much trial and error, to compensate the 'bias' added by the magnet (sometimes it is not possible, as the field pushes the ferrite close to saturation, and not enough adjustment remains).. But such a needless pain in the RS!
It is my view that theremins should be designed in a way such that one can adjust and tune it, and any processes required (such as re-assembly) after such adjustment has been performed, do not affect the adjustments / tuning. This seems like such a no-brainer, I simply cannot understand why so many theremins do not follow this obvious 'rule'..
Fred.