"Not to beat a dead horse (my disagreements with you Fred are mainly just quibbles) but having a lot of excess gain means the oscillator will pretty much run no matter what, which is good for newbies." - Dewster
ROFLMAO!! - ;-) It think you should change your icon to a picture of a rotwieler ;-) ..
First, I wish to say that your " my disagreements with you Fred are mainly just quibbles" is the way I feel about you - except I would even remove the "mainly".
Ok, I give up! CMOS oscillators are the greatest, they always work, never have the kinds of problems one gets from discreets, and the only reason why they are rarely used in theremins is because most classical theremin designers are either old or stupid or both, or because they are afraid of having some theremaniac brand their theremin "digital" (there may be some truth in this, sadly) or because they want to hide the operation from those who dont understand transistors, or because they want to appear clever to the ignorant masses who want to build a theremin... .. Nah! I don’t give up! ;-)
Sadly, there are probably some instances where some of the above may be true, but, in the main, if there was some overwhelming advantage to CMOS, I think people like Bob Moog would have used CMOS oscillators in products like the E-Pro and EtherVox which have loads of CMOS IC's doing other functions - but no - both use transistor oscillators.
I am not saying here that because Bob didn’t use CMOS oscillators they cant be any good - What I think I can deduce is that the choices he made were usually good rational ones when it came to design, and that he was well aware of CMOS oscillators, and well aware that, from a manufacturing perspective, IC's are a lot easier (cheaper) to fit in a board than discreet components. One possible reason for his choice may have been board area - Transistors take a lot less space - But I don’t think he would have made this choice if CMOS was a clearly superior choice from a stability / purity / quality perspective.
And here I go again.. Nerdolympics! LOL ;-) [nerd rating > 10 - but this discussion probably needs a geek rating!]
1.) Gain .. Yes, there is tons of gain in CMOS - More than one needs.. there is more than enough gain in almost every small signal BJT.
2.) Transistors have 3 legs, all used! - No unused pins possible which need to be tied to a rail otherwise produce shit - Require no independent supply or supply decoupling - All the sort of mistakes "newbees" are likely to make with a CMOS oscillator which produce all kinds of difficult to find problems.
3.) Newbees are best sticking to tried and tested circuits - there is probably no more thoroughly tried and tested theremin oscillator than that in the EM/EW design
4.) It is far more difficult to do a good PCB layout for a multi-element IC than it is to use discreets - and if one is building several oscillators (VFO,REF,VOL) you really don’t want to share elements in an IC between oscillators - therefore you need 3 14-pin ICs for these 3 oscillators - Far easier to use a pair of transistors per oscillator, this way uses less board area and allows oscillators to be placed apart and optimally laid out.
5.) Competent designers will choose the best solution for any particular application, based on requirements and costs - CMOS is clearly superior for your AFE application - but ..
I do think you are wrong to assert that CMOS is the only 'good' choice for theremin oscillators, or to try to put "newbees" off the EM/EW oscillators - these oscillators IME are good reliable and easy - there are dozens of really crap oscillator circuits on the www (both CMOS and transistor) - let newbees play with something which works straight off the schematic - I have never heard any reports from anyone having a problem with an EW/EM oscillator, but many reports of other oscillators which stall or squeek or otherwise screw up.
"the oscillator will pretty much run no matter what, which is good for newbies." - Applies to the EW/EM oscillator probably more than to any other - certainly more than any other that I have seen.
Fred.
(did I get the gold - or do I have to settle for the silver?) - As there are only two contestants, it must be one or the other.. ;-)