"For 4 years in and ten prototypes it doesn't seem all that advanced. I wonder why the coil is so honkerin' big? And why all the magnets in the hand-held controller?....." - Dewster
I chose to keep my thoughts to myself on this matter - Gets tiring being jumped on when one says anything rational here, LOL ;-).. Suffice it to say, I agree with your every word - with some reservations.. Well, one reservation actually.. It is beautifully crafted wood and a nice shiny copper coil.
"I'd investigate the use of an AC electromagnet for the controller"
The technology for a AC driven "bow" is in place, being used for inductive sensors, joysticks, position detection etc.. No need for a huge RX coil - 4 small RX coils, one small TX coil, Synchronous rectification, about 200kHz and its all there... Yeah - I worked for a company (PML FlightLink Ltd) who had such a product, could sense for about 1 meter, and was cheap - (or at least the components were cheap - about £10 for a 4 sensor assembly - sold as a module for about £200)..
But why have a "bow" at all ? one just wants to detect a bowing action from the hand - a capacitive or even optical sensor could provide that (?) (am I missing something ?)
The real shame is that there are so many people working alone on their musical instrument projects who, because they are alone, get lost in their passion and dreams and end up dissilusioned when nobody buys their instrument or is even interested..
There are those who spend so much time in the design / re-design phase they never get anywhere - And those who are hands-on but never seem to think about what they are doing.. All it would take is a small team of people with different "attributes" and one business minded "sanity checker" and all the (inevitable) frustration could stop - But the fun would also probably stop - at least for those who are only happy if unconstrained.
"Not trying to discourage anyone from doing new things"
David is a young man, he might learn some important lessons about design and electronics etc - I think he stands almost no chance of selling that product for more than a Chapman Stick or the same price as a small Continuum.. Unless he has some wealthy musician friends.. But the project would be enough grounds on its own for me to want to employ him if I was looking at manufacturing classy wooden electronic musical instruments, and needed a technician to oversee production.
The project conveys to me important qualities of craftmanship and focus.. It does not convey any feeling of great "cleverness" or innovation or business sense.
Fred.