"perhaps it could form the basis of a resurrected TW Theremin? " - Dewster
I think it has potential -
The only problem IMO is that there is no antenna equalisation (despite having a big antenna-side inductor) - Fr will be directly determined by C'ant and this inductor (which is in fact a series tank inductor, not an antenna linearizing resonator)
So one needs (if you are bothered about linearity / playability) to implement this further down-line.
Of course, the whole issue of linearity has become something of a mine-field - Do we need it ? Did Lev or Bob achieve it with their antenna resonators, or did they just fit those to waste money and make the theremins look fancy ? And among other things, some theremins are playable without linearizing coils...
An issue I aint getting involved with anymore ;-) .. I personally dont think TW is structured or moderated in a way that any "TW Technical Project" has any chance -
Fred.
"There would be no real tuning other than setting the heterodyning frequency for null. An untrained monkey could do that."
Hmmm .. not so sure about that! ;-) .. Having seen some famous rock musos tuning / playing a theremin such that pitch increased as distance increased (ie playing in the wrong-side-of-null field) I think one needs a wrong-side indicator at least, and ideally wrong-side muting ;-)
After all - theremins usually operate in this way, tuning the reference frequency.. If one has an oscillator which is tollerant to a wider variation in antenna capacitance, and wishes to exploit this, one needs a similarly wide frequency adjustment on the reference oscillator, making this adjustment courser and possibly more likely to drift.
Sorry to bring it back to my "upside down" topology - but that is possibly one of its big advantages - If one has a PLL error voltage which gives say a 4V change over normal playing, but can track deviations to produce say a 10V change, then one can have gross background capacitance variation - "nulling" is simply a matter of adding / subtracting a bias voltage before the modified error voltage is fed to the 'slave' oscillator.
And your series oscillator looks ideal for this, and even phase noise (if its there) probably wont be a problem after the error voltage filter and other filtering in the CV modifier are in its path.. all I need to finalise is a tuning scheme that the PLL can use to lock this oscillator over a wide variation of antenna capacitance.
Its back to the (IMO) fundamental flaw in the conventional theremin topology - producing the audio directly from the antenna front-end oscillator... Get rid of this constraint, move the (analogue) processing and audio generation away from the antenna, and you can optomise both the antenna side and the audio production independently.
With every digital theremin topology, this is how things happen - But its only done this way with a few analogue theremins (2?), and mostly (if not all of) those employ other methods to produce the sound and dont use heterodyning.