"RF filtering, maybe some integration, but no magic." - w0ttm
Oh, there is magic!
For a waveform like to one seen on V7's grid to become the sound we hear from the RCA - well, thats magic!
I have always suspected that the instrument was designed with a completely different perspective and "mind set" to the way electronic instruments are designed today.. Back then, there were no Hi Fi seperates, no standardised "line levels" - one could not make any assumptions or design for interfacing to "standard" external equipment.
In those days, whatever one was designing, one was designing the whole item or "system" - Be this a gramaphone or a theremin, it encompassed the signal source, the amplifier, the loudspeaker - and one tailored each bit, crafted each, so that what came out of the loudspeaker was what you wanted to hear.
These days we design sections - a system most often contains just the signal source and any shaping / equalisation / colouring such that, when connected to a standard "perfect" amplifier "perfect" speakers, we get the sound we want.
The RCA was designed to USE the charactaristics of the speakers it was designed to work with - I believe that the pulse nature of the audio signal was crafted to excite the speaker so that its "imperfections" and (by todays standards extremely) limited frequency response were actually exploited as an "electro acoustic resonator / complex filter" -
What we hear from the RCA theremin is the result of this crafting - Take an RCA, give it a line-level output from the V7 Grid or Plate signals, drive this signal into a modern Hi Fi, and it will be HORRIBLE! - Just look at that signal! An Enkelaar switched to its "wasp in a jar" sound will be smooth and sweet by comparison!
But look at what comes out of the RCA speaker - You see complex resonances, HF attenuations, and acoustic features you do not usually get from electronic instruments.. Look at the spectrum from these waveforms, and you see a sharp cut-off as the speaker attenuates harmonics it is unable to respond to - and this cut-off is quite low in the audio spectrum - quite "laughable" by todays Hi-Fi Standards ... But exactly what one needs to cut away what would be extremely unpleasant harmonics fron the RCA if they got through.
There certainly is MAGIC! And I do not think that we will replicate this magic simply by cloning the oscillators and mixer - We need to replicate the RCA-106 charactaristics as well - If we dont do this, we may as well just play with an Enkelaar.
Fred.
To me, the waveform on V7:G is quite similar in appearance to the raw waveform from a larynx - its the kind of waveform I have fed to vocal formant filters.. I suspect that the spectral distortions from the RCA-106 and this "vocal excitation" signal is part of the reason for the RCA's tone.