" I don't think any LC based design can do better than that regardless of whether a transformer or EQ coil is used or not" - Dewster
Some ideas which may / may not be relevant to what you are doing.. I have only used these in mormal (mode 1 or no EQ inductance) theremins..
You can improve sensitivity and linearity "to taste" if you actively control the inductance - the active control signal being a function of whatever you want..
Factors to correct linearity would be the frequency (or perhaps phase in the case of a fixed frequency system), sensitivity can be controlled by amplification of the derived frequency variation.. Also, one can have a temperature sensor (simple BJT) or several and derive a correction voltage.
Actively changing the inductance can be done by several means - The simplest being controlling a DC bias current through it.. If one has temperature compensation (a BJT glued to the ferrite for example) then any heating errors can be corrected.. But actually the variation of inductance as a function of DC current is quite huge with some ferrites, and only small currents are required..
With "Mode 1" I am finding that the whole antenna equalization system can be omitted, the oscillator designed to operate directly on antenna capacitance change (as in, the actual means of frequency change is directly down to antenna capacitance change, not down to the virtual inductance change as one gets with a equalized system) and that by having a small filter producing a CV as a function of oscillator frequency, and using this CV to alter the oscillator frequency, I can achieve equalization (and more).
Just wondering if you could do something similar with "mode 0"
The main disadvantage is lower antenna voltage (and the fact that the Lev oscillator only works with an equalizing front-end ): ... I really wanted to use the Lev oscillator, but its entirely the wrong topology and doesnt work with my favorite trick! ... I can add this trick to improve the Lev sensitivity and linearity - but not if I get rid of the EQ coils!
At the moment I am undecided - Lev oscillator with EQ coils and special custom inductors (expensive) and ITF, or a new armstrong based design with no EQ coils, and a couple of simple cheap 42IF106 IFT, which seems to give as good performance but has lower antenna voltage.. I probably need to implement both - design a PCB which can cater for both builds..
"LTspice, which is a very nice program. (I'm not sure why Bob Pease has such an aversion to analog simulation.)"
I dont really understand it either! (his "Small signal Audio Design" book is one of my bibles!).. It may be that he just doesnt enjoy simulation.. Acurate Analogue simulation is a real grind for the first year or so (although LT-Spice is a lot easier - I started with simulators where one spent more time debugging the simulator and models than debugging the circuit, and one was never sure if any problem was "real" - circuits which worked in simulation failed in reality, and visa-versa...)
Until I bought an expensive (>£2k) simulator, simulation was often not worth the effort.. Now, however, one can get LT-Spice free, get good models (for most components) and actually "build" circuits which behave like real-world circuits most of the time.. The LT simulation engine and UI is as good as that in my £2k simulator and sometimes better for analogue (and now that I rarely use MCU's to co-process with analogue circuits, the main benefits of this simulator are lost - LT-Spice is just as good, or better)
But I can understand that engineers were put off simulation in the early days - And even today, one really needs to understand the parameters to "tweek" for optimum results.. Tune the simulator too critically and simulations take forever to run, and often fail to complete.. Tune it too sloppily, and the simulation is fast, but the results are unreliable.
Fred.