Fixed the coil winding worksheet of my Theremin simulator spreadsheet (wouldn't converge for some inputs) but I'm not releasing it until I fix the main sim parts too to use a transformer tank.
Playing with it: using a PVC schedule 40 2" (OD=2.375"=60mm) wound with a single layer of AWG 32 (~0.2mm dia) wire, 380 turns takes 72 meters of wire and gives 5mH inductance and 39 ohms. The winding is 76mm long on the pipe (probably a bit longer due to wire insulation). I'm reluctant to go smaller than AWG 32 due to handling trouble and resistance (Q) and I don't want to go above 60mm diameter because I can get heatshrink tubing to fit over this. A single winding layer minimizes capacitance (highest SRF) and keeps the thing from needing bobbin flanges.
Questions:
1. Is heatshrink over the windings a bad idea? Is varnish better?
2. Is PVC a bad coil winding base? Would cardboard or similar be better in terms of temperature stability?
3. What do people use for terminals?
4. I can get extra thick varnish insulated wire (diameter, double=0.0094" vs single=0.0085") is there any benefit from thicker or thinner varnish? Should I be worrying about voltage breakdown if there's ~100V or so across the winding?
5. The tank coil will likely be a transformer. I'm wondering what the best way to include the ~0.1mH tank winding should be. From the Inca simulator software it seems like the winding should have dimensions as close to the other winding as possible, and in as close proximity as possible for best inductive coupling. Should I have a thin layer of something between primary and secondary due to the voltages involved? If so, what should that be?
I guess I'm getting tired of shopping for coils that don't exist or have too many missing specs. Winding my own may be less painful in the long run (famous last words). Only gonna do this for the pitch side though, Bournes 6300 or similar should probably work fine for the volume side where drift isn't such a big deal.