"Fred, where would one fit such a component (excuse the ignorance) and would it change the playing characteristics of the instrument?" - Roy
One lead of the ESD tube would connect directly to the antenna with as short a wire as possible, the other to the common ground point where the supply comes into the theremin, again with as short a wire as possible - if short isnt possible, it should be heavy wire with low inductance - good quality copper. Each antenna wired in this way with its own ESD tube.
I have generally used simple 90V neon tubes which are far inferior to those I have shown above - but fine if one caters for their charactaristics in the design - they have a capacitance of 3 to 5 pF..
The parts shown above have a capacitance of less than 2pF, so are better suited to retro fitting, but re-tuning will be required and I cannot say what the effect would be of the extra 2pF on say the linearity of say an EW - It will have an effect.
Fred.
ps.. DO NOT run the ESD tubes ground connection to any other grounding point on the theremin!!! - It MUST connect to the central earth return.. running it any other path (or particularly to the theremins PCB) could actually create more devastation than not fitting it!
The ground terminal on the power supply connector is the only absolutely safe connection point.
One also needs to match the tube to the antenna voltage - if the antenna voltage goes to 100v peak (200V P-P) then the tubes discharge voltage must be a little higher (say 120V)
The above is what I deem MINIMUM protection - There should really be additional low voltage protection close to the sensitive electronics down-stream of the front end.. I usually implement this with fast diodes clamping excessive voltages to the supply rails.. the discharge tubes are there to ensure that these protection devices are not overloaded.. But on their own, the ESD tubes are probably enough - I am just a bit pedantic! (I try to blow my circuits up with a HV zapper before ive even got thenm fully working, LOL - zapping the antennas and the knobs and the leads... A bit silly really - I love HV sparks! - and love beating them at their game even more ;-)