Hi Fred, I managed to open it. If you do not mind, I'll get it back...
Hi Ruslan,
For what I am hoping to do, the primary advantage is that one has all antennas on the theremin operating at a fixed, synchronous frequency - this allows one to add as many antennas (for other functions) as one wants, and also allows one to have as many theremins (of this type) operating together in close vicinity, without any interactions..
I think ideas about polyphony are a bit silly - but my main interest is in having a 5 antenna theremin - 4 of these antennas will be built into the volume loop, to provide X,Y and Z sensing of the volume hand position (to implement volume and formant control or other 3d control) and the 5th would be a conventional pitch antenna.
Aside from the above, by locking the antenna frequency, all sorts of other "ghost tone" type problems go away - I am extremely sensitive to tiny overtones produced from pitch - volume oscillator interactions, and have never managed to construct a theremin which had assynchronous pitch and volume oscillators that satisfied me - for this reason I used the reference oscillator with volume antenna resonator on all my theremins.. this, however, adds the same 'complexity' as my "upside down" topology - one cannot tune the reference oscillator, as this is shared by both pitch and volume - so tuning must be implemented at the antennas.
One other major "difficulty" with the conventional theremin topology, is that the sound produced is intimately linked to whatever one does at the front-end RF side.. If you modify the linearization (through oscillator coupling for example) this impacts on the sound (worst case being that oscillators lock too soon, meaning that one loses bass, or gets the EW "stutter" at the bass end).,
What one wants (IMO) is to be able to have independent control over linearity / sensitivity, and have independent control over the sound.. I think that one of the reasons for the limited sound "pallet" available to conventional theremins is somewhat to do with the difficulty of balancing the conflicting requirements.
With my proposed topology, all the RF stuff is "fixed" - one does not need to mess with it either to achieve linearity or to influence the tone.. This was also true with the 91 theremin - but with my topology, the sound can be produced through heterodyning, whereas with the 91 its not, and it cant be.
My topology will alow absolute control over linearity, and absolute control over sensitivity / span (number of octaves available in the 60cm playing field) - It will allow conventional heterodyning mixing and even controlled oscillator coupling which will not affect linearity, and it will allow easy register switching if an apropriate mixed-signal heterodyning "mixer" is employed.
In my head, I have a plan ;-) One conventional "voice" from a analogue mixer based on a clone design of the Lev mixer, and one mixed-signal voice which can be register switched reletive to the other - There is a CV available internally which I plan to use to enable altering the sound proportional to frequency (morphing waveforms) -
But whatever - what this topology does, I believe, is provides the best "front end" possible for a theremin - From this one gets a HF reference frequency, a variable HF frequency, and a CV for the pitch section, and can do what one wants with these without in any way impacting the linearity or span or whatever - think of the "front end" as a controller.. with output signals that can feed whatever "genuine" or "other" theremin circuits you choose - the essential fact being that these signals are the same (and more) as one has in any conventional theremin.
Fred.
I should just say that "swapping" was a simplification - what I do is to derive the control for the variable pitch oscillator from the "error" or "correction" signal used to keep the variable oscillator connected to the antenna, in lock with the crystal reference oscillator -
My problem is that I dont really know what to call these ;-) .. The oscillator connected to the antenna is a variable oscillator - but it doesnt vary! ;-) .. It would vary if the control loop (PLL) was disconnected.. If we forget about linearity / span etc, and look at a simple configuration:
one has a variable oscillator (oscA) whos natural frequency varies as a function of antenna capacitance, and one has a fixed crystal reference oscillator (oscX) and one uses a PLL to lock oscA to oscX, from this PLL there will be an "error" voltage (cVe) used to adjust oscA's frequency and keep its frequency constant as changes occur to the antenna capacitance..
Now we have an identical oscillator (oscV) which is not connected to an antenna, but has a fixed capacitor there instead, and we drive this with the error voltage (cVe) derived from oscA's PLL.. (in fact, it would be this cVe inverted, but ignore that ;-)
If everything was perfect, oscV will run at the same frequency that oscA WOULD be running at IF oscA was not locked to oscX.
ok - if youve got that...
If we now insert a "modifier" between the PLL (cVe) output and oscV's control input, we can do all sorts of things.. We can amplify cVe (increase the span) we can attenuate it (reduce the span) we can process it with a log or exponential or squaring circuit -, or mix these functions to taste (effectively create a modifiable tranfer curve through whatever means we want - I am probably going to implement this by morphing several ramps - linear and exponential for example - and using these in a frequency-control PWM - my maths weakness causes me some problems in this area, but the functions are reasonabley simple), and therebye change how oscV responds to cVe, and therebye have complete control over linearity...
My major problem is that I cannot build anything at the moment - I really need a competent partner somehere who can build stuff and work with me on projects.