Look forward to hearing your opinions Gordon. Nice chap is John and as you say an intelligent man eh? Nice lot of musical instruments in the 'studio' as well. He made a change to my early LV-3 unit a while back as there was a slight development issue with a variable pot and the germanium diode. Sorted it with no fuss and got it back to me asap. So you (Thomas G and anyone else who has one from now) are benefitting from having the latest upgrade for reliability; as do I now. Nice too to see someone who is not just out to make a few pound sterling/bucks, but enjoys his creations & their owners responses!!!
NEW UK DESIGNED & BUILT THEREMIN with volume loop & pitch rod etc
I received my LV3 theremin a few days ago and have had opportunity to play it a little, and these are my first impressions.
From: Eastleigh, Hampshire, U.K. ................................... Fred Mundell. ................................... Electronics Engineer. (Primarily Analogue) .. CV Synths 1974-1980 .. Theremin developer 2007 to present .. soon to be Developing / Trading as WaveCrafter.com . ...................................
Joined: 12/7/2007
Many thanks for that detailed info, Gordon.
I have been told by a Russian contact who bought one, that its essentially an EW. I dont believe this (although it may have some EW similarities?). Of particular interest to me is whether the LV3 has any antenna equalization - Did you notice any inductors or coils which look like they may do this job?
From what you say about the volume antenna operation, it sounds like this is some form of simple clipping / overdrive distortion.. And yes, I can see that this, in combination with a post-VCA (and therefore post distortion) volume control, you can get quite a lot of flexibility.
Not sure I understand the volume getting quieter "the the timbre gets a bit of distortion and it continues to get louder, then it gets quieter again." - This sounds like an incorrectly tuned filter on the volume circuit, increasing the volume as hand capacitance reduces, reaching the top of the curve (at the filters resonant frequency) then reducing as the frequency moves to the other side of the resonant point.
Fred.
The board does not look much like an etherwave board to me. I can't see the characteristic coils near the pitch rod, or the trim-able inductors. I could be mistaken but I think there are three trim pots. The only component I can see that might be a coil looks like a fat resistor with coloured stripes. The marking on the board suggests it is a number of micro Henrys. (Lower case u with a tail, capital H) Henrys are a measure of inductance, if I recall correctly.
i don't think it is incorrectly tuned. John had it set up when I got there and demonstrated it for me, so I imagine it is as he wants it to be. It means that I can walk away from the theremin without needing to mute it, which is a convenience.
(I'm currently a couple of hundred miles away from my LV3, so this is from memory.)
From: Eastleigh, Hampshire, U.K. ................................... Fred Mundell. ................................... Electronics Engineer. (Primarily Analogue) .. CV Synths 1974-1980 .. Theremin developer 2007 to present .. soon to be Developing / Trading as WaveCrafter.com . ...................................
Joined: 12/7/2007
Thanks for that confirmation Gordon,
Without tunable inductors, and without equalizing inductors, its extremely unlikely to be based on the EW! - And yes, uH us micro Henrys.. Its not going to be an equalizing inductance with a value in the uH range - EQ inductors are larger - usually in the mH range.*
As for volume tuning, "incorrect" was with reference to the EW and other theremins operation that I have seen - as in "normal" operation - But there is no reason why "normality" is compulsory - silencing a theremin when the player is away from it is, IMO, a good idea - I do this by muting my theremins when they operate on the wrong side of the pitch null point (when the VFO frequency is >= the reference frequency).
*Have just seen the photo of the board you sent.. looks like a 470uH is connected directly to the pitch antenna - This one thing shows me how this theremin is likely to be operating - And it has NO similarity to the EW in any way !
It actually really surprises me that this theremin works as well as it does, and that it doesnt drift more! - as I see it, the VF oscillator probably operates directly through the 470uH and antenna capacitance, and the reference oscillator through 680uH and its (trimmable) capacitance - circuits are probably close or identical, giving some degree of thermal compensation.. But the frequency determining components are not all identical - in particular, the trim capacitor on the Ref Osc is not duplicated on the VFO.. Trimming capacitors and potentiometers can have severe temperature dependencies.
I expect the operating frequency is quite high, possibly over 1MHz (with normal antenna capacitance and 470uH in series with this, one gets abour 2MHz - there will be other capacitances at play and deliberately added by the tuning circuit, but I would be really surprised if these dropped the frequency below 1MHz or even 1.5MHz).
I have no guess as to the operation of the volume circuit or VCA - this could be quite clever, as there appears to be no inductors - Oh - I see them ! ;-) Ok - no mystery anymore! ;-)
This is probably the cheapest possible design that could be implemented within the price (or perhaps any price, LOL) - John has probably managed to put the absolute minimum system together and people are happy with it! That is quite an achievement IMO!
Fred.
I think people will like the price, be happy that it exceeds their price-based expectations of it and forgive its deficiencies because of the price. I guess that >£100 puts it at the top end of the impulse purchase range. It did for me. :-)
I was interested to note that a lot of the circuit board is unpopulated. The first reason I thought of which seems plausible is that it started as a more complex design that was then simplified until it was in budget.
From: Eastleigh, Hampshire, U.K. ................................... Fred Mundell. ................................... Electronics Engineer. (Primarily Analogue) .. CV Synths 1974-1980 .. Theremin developer 2007 to present .. soon to be Developing / Trading as WaveCrafter.com . ...................................
Joined: 12/7/2007
"I was interested to note that a lot of the circuit board is unpopulated. The first reason I thought of which seems plausible is that it started as a more complex design that was then simplified until it was in budget." _ GordonC
The size of the PCB is dictated a bit by the box size - its the single most expensive component (or perhaps the case is) even though its the cheapest possible single-sided board, and has lots of spare space.. It costs nothing to add traces/places for extra components, so its always a good idea to pack as much as one might possibly use for a more advanced build, into the available space.
Guessing at the function these missing components could provide, it looks to me like a pair of 3819 (jFet) buffers for the oscillators (or perhaps a jFet mixer), and a switchable capacitance selector, giving 6 positions.. Probably having resistors on thev 'A' connections (?) - Possibly a tone selector switch, with a toggle perhaps to select either the standard (existing) tone or this alternative tone / mixer.
Fred.
"I was interested to note that a lot of the circuit board is unpopulated. The first reason I thought of which seems plausible is that it started as a more complex design that was then simplified until it was in budget." _ GordonC
The size of the PCB is dictated a bit by the box size - its the single most expensive component (or perhaps the case is) even though its the cheapest possible single-sided board, and has lots of spare space.. It costs nothing to add traces/places for extra components, so its always a good idea to pack as much as one might possibly use for a more advanced build, into the available space.
Guessing at the function these missing components could provide, it looks to me like a pair of 3819 (jFet) buffers for the oscillators (or perhaps a jFet mixer), and a switchable capacitance selector, giving 6 positions.. Probably having resistors on thev 'A' connections (?) - Possibly a tone selector switch, with a toggle perhaps to select either the standard (existing) tone or this alternative tone / mixer.
Fred.
I have a decent picture of the board if you want Fred. I saw there was going to be a rotary switch perhaps for octaves ranges but John (designer) decided against it after trying one as it affected the pitch linearity etc.
kru251 (at) rocketmail.com if you want to see it!
One important point about the LV3 that I did not notice at first is that the aluminium enclosure is effectively part of the pitch rod. Moving the pitch hand down, parallel to the rod and over the enclosure, causes a significant rise in pitch.
[correction - it's the other way around. Lower hand, lower pitch.]
One important point about the LV3 that I did not notice at first is that the aluminium enclosure is effectively part of the pitch rod. Moving the pitch hand down, parallel to the rod and over the enclosure, causes a significant rise in pitch.
I had to check this as I'd never noticed it, and my LV-3 has a slight pitch decrease when starting at the top of the pitch rod and passing down & parallel to the pitch rod..............but only very slightly. This whether my hand be in the centre over the housing enclosure or nearer the pitch rod. Interesting.
I guess because I try and play 'horizontally' I'd never noticed this effect.
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