" How important is oscillator spectral purity in an analog Theremin?" - Dewster
In my view, and this may well be blasphemy to many, spectral "purity" is not a good idea - control of the spectrum is a good idea..
The audio wave shape and harmonic content comes from several sources.. and its the mixer which determines the importance of the oscillator waveform in the final output..
A true multiplier (mixer) will only output the sum and difference of the input signals - forget the sum components - these are thrown away.. the difference components will be the difference of all the components of the two input signals - therefore..
1:) the output harmonics will only be harmonics which appear on both input signals - if either signal is a pure sine wave, there can only be a sine wave output
2.) harmonics are multiplied - so assuming the fundamentals are at amplitude "1" and the 2nd harmonics of both input signals are at level "0.5", the output will be a fundamental with an level of "1" (1*1=1) and the 2nd harmonic will be at a level of "0.25" (0.5*0.5)..
It can be seen that a filtering action takes place with true multiplication - this, IMO, is one reason why analogue theremins using true 4Q multipliers have a more sine output than others.
In order to get more harmonics out, one needs to put more harmonics in from both oscillators.
However - most analogue theremins do not use a perfect mixer - the diode mixer in the EW distorts the hell out of the input waveforms mix.. And with these, I think that the input waveforms are quite insignificant in terms of contribution to the output harmonic content - It is only when these inputs become severely distorted (as when the oscillators pull / sync to each other, as can happen when their frequencies are close - at the bass end) that their harmonic contributions become really significant.
It should, however, be stated that some harmonics are particularly unmusical, and if these appear even at quite low levels on the input waveforms, they can make the sound unpleasant even through a diode mixer..
Then there is deliberate post-mixer distortion added in many theremins, and distortion added deliberately by changing the bias on multipliers like the MC1496..
Without doing anything to the waveform produced by the MC1496 (as in, just using it as a true multiplier) one gets a nearly pure sine output from standard oscillator inputs.. One really needs to distort the input waveforms quite significantly to make a noticable difference.
So I dont think spectral purity needs to be too critical - I think that controlled distortion of the oscillator waveforms is desirable for tone coloration, and avoidance of musically unpleasant harmonics existing on the input waveforms is important .
Fred.