Hello TW folks,
My daughter shown some interest in the Theremin, and me, as an electronics tinkerer, thought... Why not building one?
Soon got to know ThereminWorld and read as much as I could to make an educated choice of what Theremin to try to build.
I decided for what it seemed to be an authentic sounding, and yet not very complicated in design, the EM Bob Moog's Etherwave.
From the beginning, I had already a guess that it wouldn't be easy to get the exact antenna inductor parts, but I didn't think it would be THAT! difficult.
It seems I decided to jump on this wagon just a few months too late... as those inductors apparently went out-of-production by Hammond at the beginning of 2018... and I just started this July (7 months too late, to my misery).
Now, I think it's already too late to step back and choose another design and I don't like to give up on anything...so I'm really decided to find a solution for the unavailability of those inductors.
My first idea is to build them (the inductors), as similarly constructed as the original ones as I realized from reading here that Theremins are tricky all by themselves, so it seemed to me a good idea to keep as close as possible to the original 3-pi construction over a ferrite rod.
So, after this long introduction here is my starting point:
1. I got a bunch of 24mm long, 6mm dia ferrite rods. I don't know their actual composition and their permeability, but I can figure it out by trial and error, winding a few simple 1 layer inductors, and measuring its inductance.
2. I don't have a honeycomb winder, so I'll have to wind by hand the 3-pi coils on a form.
3. At this point, I don't have any Litz wire, but I got 250g of AWG 37 enameled wire.
4. I`m planing to machine a few plastic forms (from nylon or teflon rods), to allow the hand-winding of the n-pi coils
And here are my initial questions:
A. do you think that it's feasible to obtain reasonably working inductors, using the cores above, hand-wound AWG37, over the plastic forms? What I mean is: will I be able to achieve the low self-capacitance needed for getting the self resonant frequency high enough for them to work?
B. Do you think that some deviation from the original 3-pi construction could help? For instance, I think I can machine as much as 5 narrow channels, of about 1.5mm wide, separated by four 1.5mm walls (making up for a 5-pi construction).
C. What about the 37AWG wire...Do you think it would help if I twist it in a pair or a triad, making up for a poor man's Litz wire? Or maybe trying to do the same (a triad), using thinner wire (like 40AWG).
D. About the number of inductors... To help alleviate the build up of self capacitance as the number of turns increase, would it work, or would it help to build more inductors, of lower inductance each one? (I know ahead that I would need to find ways to minimize effects of mutual inductance between them).
E. In another attempt to allow for smaller inductors (and avoid the self-capacitance problems inherent to the high value), would it be valid to:
E.1. Increase the operating frequency (say... in about 50%).
E.2. Add some capacitance to the antenna? (e.g., I noticed on some pictures of Moog's Etherwave plus, that it has a square of grounded aluminum foil, and the Pitch Antenna connecting wire passes over it... I suppose that this wire alone is probably adding a few pF to the antenna, allowing for the same given resonant frequency using less inductance? Does that have a too big impact on the pitch field?
Sorry for the long post and too many questions...
Regards, from Brazil,
Fabio