UPDATE: It (mostly) works!!! :-D
Pitch & volume are tuned (thanks to Dewster's buffer circuit I did the rough part with oscillosscope, would have gone mad otherwise considering the coil range I guess :-D) & I can play it (well, not quite yet, haha!)
The only thing that seems not to work is the brightness control - it has no audible effect whatsoever.
The waveform control does, it changes the tone from a pulsy waveform (full counter clockwise) to rather pure sine (clockwise) - so it's not like my guitar amp is totally cutting the high end or anything.
Any hints on how to debug that?
Here's a quick photo for now (good that you can't see the whole case, it would display my lack of woodworking skills & workshop / tools ;-) )
http://postimg.org/image/4fdulrgkf/full/
The small perfboard roughly in the middle contains Dewster's bass mod in SMD form, plugged on with pin headers. The jumper on top mixes the buffered oscillator signals - or not, if removed it allows to view both signals separately on scope.
The reddish cans are the coils I talked about.
The board is a custom layout - I used the smallest board size allowed by Bilex-LP, a bulgarian PCB manufacturer, which is 120 x 80 mm², to drop the price. I also omitted soldermask. Such the price for 2 PCBs was just ~ 32€, e.g. 16,- EUR for one! Beat that, heh! (I'm going to treat the PCB with an insulation spray to protect the traces, one that can still be soldered through if necessary, as soon as the thing works 100%)
Also, my case is only about 39cm wide instead the ~45cm of the EM specs - not so much by choice but because that one weekend when I felt like building this, I happened to have spare wood parts of that size at hand *g*
As soon as everything works:
If anyone cares, I could upload the layout somewhere & reference to the Chech (?) ebay seller who still sells these coils, since this appears to work and the price is nice!
All three coils are the same, adjustable 45..100µH - still worked also for the volume antenna, although mine is currently far thinner than spec, 3mm or so brass wire.
(The provisorial pitch antenna is a wooden 8mm diameter stick, with a layer of doubly adhesive tape + aluminium foil, held in place by those two green clothing-pegs *g*)
That my layout works may well be due to luck than anything else, considering this is my first PCB layout ever.
If the second build, the one for a pal who also wants one, also works, Icould imagine, though, that someone might be interested - I've seen mostly considerably more expensive BOMs (incl. PCB cost) for bulding an Etherwave than mine!
Ah, yes, it dawned on me that having the audio jack on the right, i.e. the shielded cable close to the pitch antenna, was not so smart, but that's not the final front panel :-)