"A necessarily small and cramped pitch field would be would be fairly damning. A large one that is somewhat linear at least in the mid field could make some of the other negative issues raised less urgent." - Dewster
I agree -
But to me it pans out like this..
Thereminists and probably the majority of those interested in the theremini as a theremin, arent going to be too bothered by CV out or MIDI out - They will be more interested in linearity, stability, playability and "theremin-like" sounds.
The other market however - the synth crowd, are probably going to be more interested in CV and MIDI than almost anything else.
Three big market chunks - Thereminists, Synthesists, and those who want a low cost stand alone instrument just for fun.
Things are looking like Moog may only have satisfied customers in the latter group.. Its probably the biggest group - so they may well still do ok with it... But surprise is that the (probably next most important group, their primary customer base, ) the synth users are the ones who seem to have been short-changed the most.
Moog cannot afford to do this - because it will impact on sales of their other, far more important products if they piss this group off... And there are quite a number of people on synth forums (and no, I am NOT stirring up trouble on these! I have only said "nasty" things about Moog here! ;-) asking questions like "Well, whats the CV for then, if you cannot control pitch with it?" and lots of misinformation being presented, like claims that the analogue heterodyning voice is available - Misinformation that was seeded by Moog, and which will come back and impact them because they will lose customer trust and loyalty.
IF, However, The theremini doesnt have the CV problems that have been touted, and IF the theremini has a good specification, THEN Moogs lack of clarity and silence on these forums is just unbelievable. It would only require one knowledgeable Moog employee actively engaging with forum posts, and clearly and authoritatively putting matters straight, and/or Moog to release comprehensive specifications for issues to be resolved.
Yes, there are quite a few forums - but really not that many that it would even be a full-time job to deal with the storm that's brewing.
COME ON MOOG! GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER! - Contact one of the many competent people who have tried to get through to you but had no reply, give them the information, and you probably wont even need to employ a fire-fighter !
I want the Theremini to be good, and have good CV output! - I have a design for an external add-on which has a market only if the theremini CV and CC work!
" I never once thought of the CV 'following' the output pitch. We probably would not be discussing on this topic, if everyone thought that to begin with. " - Randy.
On the EW-Pro, the CV out tracks the pitch (I dont think it tracks the register switching - not sure.. But it certainly gives 1V/Octave output on the "primary" pitch from what I have heard). The EW+ CV output tracks the pitch (as it doesnt have register switching, pitch tracking is across the whole span - except that tracking fails below about 100Hz because it uses the actual audio to derive the pitch data).
So I personally dont think it unreasonable to expect the theremini to track the pitch, or reasonable for people to have assumed that it didnt! ;-)
From a technical perspective (particularly when one has a digital processor dealing with the data) there is no comprehensible reason for not implementing CV which tracks the pitch, regardless of the span or register or auto-tuning or whatever.. You have an audio output (as on the EW+) you even have the option of providing a simple digitally generated frequency (square wave or whatever) several octaves higher than the audio output which could reduce latency and allow tracking right down to 16Hz (I have done this using PLL's to multiply the HF oscillator frequencies before heterodyning them, to produce a frequency 8x the audio frequency from the audio heterodyning mixer).. You also have the possibility of doing exponentiation digitally --- but staying with analogue, all the pulse / timing stuff needed in the EW+ pitch-voltage converter could be mopped up in the MCU. Even if there is smoothing between increments and low resolution is hidden by this, taking the audio as the CV reference would still work!
It could have been beautiful! To do the job well (using analogue exponentiation) might have added $5 at most to the cost - in fact, it would have been better IMO if Moog had just put the signal generation stuff in the MCU (zero production cost, perhaps a couple of days development cost) and had a tiny CV card that could be added at extra cost, rather than provide a useless CV out.
There is something of a slight historic precedent perhaps to what is happening at Moog.. Arp (their main competitor many years ago) went to the wall because they produced a guitar pitch-CV controller/synth that messed up on its CV conversion/outputs.. Oh, there were other problems as well, but failure of the CV to accurately track the pitch was the major killer.
Fred.