Hi there,
In this day and age when volume circuits can be extremely sensitive why a loop for the design?
A straight sturdy chrome pipe 25 mm dia, 4 cm long can work quite effectively allowing for less response near the open end. Is the desire for a loop more cosmetic or to aid in a less responsive volume circuit?
Silvered Mylar tape is also very electrically responsive so a more sculptured volume control design is possible. You could coil mirrored 1/2" transparent plastic, embed a wire in a wooden cane, has personal creativity fallen by the wayside? I appear to be going way off thread. Stop the Replicants! oops
I have researched and redesigned my own volume control a lot the past year. My goal is a volume control separated from the pitch section so it can be placed anywhere around me for comfortable play. This solves the problem of right or left handed theremins, makes a pitch only a true theremin and it even has a switch to reverse the response direction on the spot without any retuning. Some Thereminist find the non-standard hand response direction to be more intuitive. Add wonderful shading in the quiet range, a mute switch, a pitch preview and you have what might be a revolution in theremin design. Stop pretending you have a classic when you never will and strive for your own ideal sound with control.
I have thought about the need of an independent volume control for years. It is not a gadget I sell, but a design given to the DIY'er to build, if they understand basic electronics.
Christopher