P3 Progress
I haven't been playing P2, nor working on P3 nearly as much as I would like. The ergonomics of P2 aren't the best which is a disincentive, and I can't seem to bring myself to cut the microphone stand down to make it more playable (burned / lessons from the past - don't make a destructive move unless you can see a clear path all the way to the end - which can be paralyzing, but never again). This morning I awoke and vowed to stick all subsystems in individual cardboard boxes and just move ahead already, but got derailed stuffing the Lincoln Memorial antenna plate boxes, which actually went rather well:
The thicker (36 gauge: 0.005"? 0.127mm?) roll of aluminum I bought is both thin enough to be adequately deformable yet thick enough to hold its shape well. I used blue painter's tape to hold it down, but then ran across some old double sided foam tape in my junk box which is now securing the top ends real good, and is probably all that's necessary. Got a little carried away improving the coil securing hardware, and still need to address the insufficiently tall volume coil with an extension - the dimensions require a 90mm or so former length of 1 1/2" schedule 40 PVC - the plate side windings need to be a sufficient distance away so as to not be damped by the plate looking like a big shorted turn (thanks ILYA!). No AFE's in there yet, I'll probably use my old hand wired ones from P1.
With P2 in particular, but even with P1, I didn't experiment around with the macro ergonomics enough. This time I'm going to keep everything as utterly flexible as possible, and only commit to a case design and dimensions after I've played the best configuration I can come up with for an extended period of time. P2 was a step backwards, and I don't want to make that mistake again. You (or at least I) really can't think these things out in your head, you can give it your best guess, and you can come up with new configurations when the old ones aren't panning out, but you can't know where anything is going or where everything will end up. For better and worse, it's wide open experimentation with electronic musical instrument controllers, which live / die on their ergonomics (if they aren't stillborn due to poor electrical / software engineering, or poor physical design - a thousand ways to die). But I still have to ask myself things like: are boxes with U-shaped antenna plates sufficiently optimized (micro ergonomics)? It probably never really ends, but it hopefully reaches a point where you've sufficiently explored and ruled out all of the obvious alternatives.