"Fred, have you ever tried the littelfuse SP721?" - Dewster
No, I havent - But seeing the spec, I will look at buying some when I get back to the lab.. Only, I have about 1k neons which would end up without a use.. And neons have the advantage that I could advertise my theremins as having a tube in them!
LOL ;-)
Regarding ESD, 4000 series can tolerate 400V from the standard HBM (Human Body Model - 100pF via 1.5k resistor) whereas the TS555C can stand 1500V (not 15kV) from the HBM - so it is nearly 4x more robust..
But, I do not think even 1.5kV is anywhere nearly safe enough, I think it is way too lax - A person walking over a carpet can easily develop a potential of 20kV, and this can easily kill both the 4000 series and the more robust TS555C (and, for that matter, it can damage a BJT even though it may not kill it - it can reduce its operational life and the device can fail unexpectedly at some future time). Limiting the ESD peak to some managable voltage (90V for example) and then limiting the current which can be provided by this voltage to a level the device can stand is, IMO, the safest option.
I am a probably more pedantic than most, having worked in two critical areas, medical life support equipment and monitoring equipment for explosive atmospheres (oil rigs, refineries etc) where any failure can cost lives and lots of money! - Theremins are a different animal altogether, but old habits die hard!
Fred.
(as an aside, I built a neon tube theremin once just for the hell of it - two simple neon relaxation oscillators.. The real fun was when I added an "equalization" coil and got "lightening bolts" jumping from the antenna to the nearest ground! - As a theremin, it was hopeless! ;-)
A lot more wind about ESD for obsessive engineers: ;-)
"You can basically stick that sucker on anything that might overvoltage, including differing logic level interfaces (probably with a series resistor) and stepped down (the AFE uses a capacitive divider) Theremin antenna waveforms."
This, alas, is the most overlooked aspect of ESD protection - We only tend to think about protecting semiconductors! ... But think about it - What is the voltage rating (and, for that matter, current rating) of the capacitors in your divider? .. Under ESD conditions, any "down-line" protection device can even put more stress on passives which are "up-line". Damage to ceramic capacitors from ESD can be really nasty - you wont see it, it wont show up without doing some quite fancy testing - ESR, temperature etc, because the dielectric properties can be permanently changed by a large brief overvoltage event. Resistors are also subject to damage.
Theremins which have an equalizing inductor are quite well protected by this inductor - one is, after all, putting a charged (to say 20kV) 100pF onto the antenna via 1k5 ohms, this resistance with the inductance takes all the speed off the edge of the pulse, and by the time this pulse has transversed the inductor and got to the oscillator, it can be managed with a transient supressor of some kind, or even be safe without protection - Even though the voltage will greatly exceed the insulation resistance of the coil wire, there is unlikely to be enough current to cause major damage to the coil if it arcs to a lower potential point .. For theremins, the above is 'safe' - Quite different if one had the theremin in an explosive atmosphere though...