I've decided to break this project into a separate topic to keep clutter out of Dewster's original thread. If this ends up being successful it may also provide others who may be interested in building the D-Lev with some more curated information relevant to the build. Dewster's years of effort on this project, his documentation of the evolutionary progress, even including the dead ends, and the open sharing of the ongoing results represents a remarkable effort that I think should be applauded. I hope this project will be good for both of us and others as well.
As I've said earlier, I'm totally at Dewster's mercy regarding the programming side of this. I may pick up a thing or two about the mechanics of dealing with FPGAs, and maybe even learn a little about HDL, but I'm really only comfortable with the other hardware and the packaging aspects of the project. And Dewster left precious little analog to play with. Nevertheless, we move forward...
I'm taking a number of liberties compared to the way that Dewster built his prototype. Although the most important task is to make a working prototype for evaluation, it seems worthwhile to try to make some incremental changes along the way. I've voiced some concerns about pitch and volume plates requiring a different playing technique, but I'm going to give them and the visual tuner a good evaluation as-designed before going off on my own. I don't think that anyone who follows Dewster's thread would accuse him of designing anything without putting a lot of thought into every detail, but some aspects of playability and aesthetics are very personal, and my main goal is to also put a lot of my own thought into making a theremin that feels comfortable to play and doesn't require too much technique adjustment from other theremins. Some of the fabrication methods that I use are not really mainstream, and the pictures aren't intended to represent a tutorial. I'm just throwing ideas out there to add to the Internets of Knowledge, the same source that I research and borrow (steal) from every day.
The pictures below will chronicle the progress on a prototype enclosure and the pc boards for a first whack at this. Everything will change as this progresses. This enclosure has no resemblance to how a final version would look - for one thing, I dislike using PVC pipe in any projects where it's obvious. The conventional box-with-two-arms evolved from the way the two coils were made on PVC forms. These were the first parts built, and the adjustable pipe arms and main box just sort of grew onto them. I don't use a tuner, but I'm going to build this one anyway with the intent of making it detachable or otherwise viewable in the direction of pitch plate; this is why the main box that you see here has no tuner yet. The whole wood/acrylic combo was an easy approach for a prototype that also provided an opportunity to experiment with simple graphics on the back of acrylic. The sliding arms and fully adjustable plates are necessary for now to give as many setup options as possible, and hopefully these could be simplified later after learning more about the theremin.
For convenience, the links to the build information that Dewster compiled recently in his original thread are repeated here:
[1598] - PROTOTYPE: Parts List.
[1602] - PROTOTYPE: Tools List.
[1605] - PROTOTYPE: Pitch & Volume Antennas, AFE Board Schematic with PIX.
[1610] - PROTOTYPE: LED tuner with PIX.
[1613] - PROTOTYPE: SPI EEPROM, TOSLINK TX with PIX.
[1615] - PROTOTYPE: Rotary Encoders.
[1616] - PROTOTYPE: FPGA & LCD.
[1621] - PROTOTYPE: Fashion Shots (PIX).
[1625] - PROTOTYPE: Operating Frequencies.
[1634] - PROTOTYPE: Rotary Encoder hookup.
Photos to come....
PS: this will be my first attempt to link to photos hosted on Amazon Drive, and it's not working quite like I would expect. If I can't figure it out I'll put them elsewhere. EDIT: I had to host on Dropbox instead. The images are larger than shown here. Right Click>View Image will show the full 1200 x 800 size.