All,
Thanks to a number of you on this forum I have managed to get the noise level of my Theremax to an acceptably unnoticable level [linear regulator, oscillator isolation, extra comparator decoupling, adding comparitor output series resistors, and moving the pitch audio chain away from the comparitor on a separate board] and I am now moving on to coupling and pitch linearization.
My first question is should I work on coupling and tone first and linearity second? - I think so since I have read that coupling changes linearity in the first place but I think that the oscillator frequency will also impact the coupling. Right now I have copper walls between the oscillators. I plan to play with fixed caps, varactor diodes, and resistance and maybe even inductance.
I have two pitch antennas, an 18" piece of 3/8" water supply tubing and a LEV antenna. I have found that the linearity is very dependent on the oscillator frequency and as an example at 820kHz the linearity response of both antennas is the same (C2-C7). I know that I need to change the 100pf caps on the pitch oscillators to be able to move in the 900 -1000kHz region for the LEV antenna to be in its sweet spot. I can do that by changing to 68pF but if I do that then I will probably have to change the volume caps as well to keep them far enough apart. I assume, but don't know that the inductor in series with the volume antenna will only do what it is supposed to do over a limited oscillator frequency range and I think I want to keep the volume oscillators at a higher frequency than the pitch oscillators. I have 10, 22, 47, 68, and 100pF NPO caps to play with. I also have a "grab bag" of inductors.
My gut feeling is to change the pitch caps to 68pf and the volume caps to 47 and potentially change the volume inductor. The IF transforms tune over the better part of an octive at least with 100pF. (480 - 850 KHz or so). Maybe I can't move the frequencies too far from the stated resonate frequency though.
Anyway, if anyone has advice on a good place to start for the two frequencies that would be helpful.
Thanks,
Greg