D-Lev Kit Offering
In the past I've thought "never" to a D-Lev kit offering due to the extra support issues, but I've recently had second thoughts. The internals and software are complete, but the realities of housing a theremin in low quantities have turned out to be harsher than expected. I realize that most people can't be bothered to build their own housings, but a few might, and a kit represents a good opportunity for everyone.
Sticking the AFE & coil in a 3D printed box would modularize the business ends, and 3D printed control panel and tuner panel would round it out. I could print and assemble all these things, connect them up, pump it, test it, and ship it out, with everyone secure in the knowledge that it all just works.
Folks could play it splayed out on a table, while coming up to speed and scheming their own enclosures and antennae. They could paint the panels or make their own, but they would be starting out with something that is entirely functional. If they don't care about looks they could mount it in any convenient box. If they want an expensive showpiece they can contract it out to someone with fabrication experience - the D-Lev electronics and software are quite adaptable and forgiving, and the provided printed panels could simplify the enclosure design.
So a modular functioning kit seems like a fairly painless way to get some units into interested people's hands. The initial build will be 10 kits, and I've amassed just about everything in terms of parts and tooling to do that.
The kit will be priced at $500 USD. If that seems high, here is a partial inventory of the parts:
$25 FPGA board (currently $38!)
$11 LCD
$5 LEDs
$15 Encoders
$13 ICs
$10 Passives (est.)
$ 3 Magnet wire (est.)
$15 Connectors, wire, screws, etc. (est.)
$5 PWBs (est.)
$10 PETG plastic
Which comes to $112, and that list isn't exhaustive at all. For instance, today I just made an order for screws, connectors, and heat shrink for over $70 - the incidentals are easy to lose track of, but they really add up. I have to buy in small quantities, so I don't get the big boy pricing of <$0.01 per passive, and shipping tends to eat me alive too.
And of course my labor is worth something to me at least. I figure there's a day or two of coil winding, 3D printing, soldering, and general assembly for each kit, not to mention coordination before and after the sale, packing, shipping, support in the field, etc. (If I were a company I'd be charging for 10 years of R&D performed by a seasoned MSEE at $100/hr!).
To put the kit price in some perspective: the Etherwave main board replacement sold for around $70 and likely cost less than 1/2 that in parts. The Etherwave Standard kit is gone, but when I bought mine years ago it was around $400 IIRC (though that included the antennas and a simple unfinished case). So you can see that the parts of a mid-level Theremin can cost relatively little, but that a completed Theremin is sooo much more expensive than just the electronics, even when manufactured in quantity.
I'll be posting some pictures of the kit soon. You've seen most of it already if you've been following this thread, but the AFE & coil box (sans plate antenna) have been re-engineered, and I did an initial print of that yesterday which turned out pretty nice.
Please contact me if you are interested in a kit, my email address is in my profile.