D-Lev "Pro" Build Progress Pt. 1
The good news is that the D-Lev Pro (informal name for D-Lev stuffed into a custom-build EWPro-like cabinet) is finally up and running with the latest board set and is working well with only two minor issues. To keep the inductor size down for this cabinet design, both oscillators are running at higher frequencies (roughly 2.9MHz for volume and 1.9MHz for pitch). The inductor physical size constraint was driven entirely by the pitch oscillator side, where both the inductor and the Analog Front End (AFE) surface-mount pcb are located inside the end of the pitch extension arm. But having a small volume inductor both electrically and physically doesn't seem to hurt either.
New boards arrived last Friday from JLCPCB. The order had been confirmed on the previous Monday, and both the turnaround time and the board quality were again outstanding. Four of the seven different boards are somewhat universal D-Lev boards, while the other three (TOUCH, POWER, and INTERCONNECT) are unique to this particular enclosure design. Most of the changes made from the original board run involved increasing a few hole clearances to make component insertion easier.
The Pro theremin has been up and running with the first board set for a couple weeks, and as the new boards were built up they were substituted one-by-one into place and confirmed to be working. The three new Pro-unique boards were built up and tested on the bench. All were working as planned and the theremin was then partially disassembled to allow installation of the new boards.
The touch-sensitive feature that lights corresponding LEDs surrounding the display panel for whichever encoder knob is being touched was intended to be used only on this cabinet design because the knobs had to be placed well below the display, and I wanted to avoid having to look back and forth between the knobs and the display. The eight encoder boards were removed from the front panel to allow the TOUCH board to be installed between the two encoder columns. Each of the TOUCH board's eight touch pad input lines goes to a screw-hole pad in the board perimeter. One screw goes through each of these pads and connects directly to each of the eight encoder knob bezel rings. The knobs themselves are only capacitively coupled to these bezels, but the programmable sensitivity of the TTP226 IC allows a wide range of adjustment from requiring direct finger pressure on a knob to only requiring close proximity to it.
Eight 0-80 screws hold and connect the TOUCH pcb, and when the screws are tightened down the board curves and conforms to the panel curvature. I had considered using .031" substrate for this, but the .062" bends to shape without a problem. This was the first pass of this particular board, and it came out too wide to fit between the encoders. I had to sand the width and restore a couple lost traces with wire. This will be fixed on the next board run.
Touching an encoder knob lights the corresponding LED surrounding the LCD panel. As it is now all knobs respond to touch but the lower right knobs are a little less sensitive. I think this can be balanced out by changing the shunt chip capacitor that is on each line.
I was always ready to ditch this feature at any point if it became a problem, and I still am, although it looks like it is going to work.
Next is a sequence of photos showing the internal board layout and how the cabinet goes together. In this first view the top left board is a simple interconnect to transition from a ribbon cable to the individual wires that run to the pitch arm contacts. The brass button to the right of it is part of the locking mechanism (and electrical ground) for the pitch arm. The green air-core inductor is for the volume AFE pcb seen just to the right and below it, mounted on its own little shelf bracket. Mounted deeper in the cabinet and within the front panel itself is the LCD with the multicolored Dupont wires connecting to the MAIN FPGA pcb. These are temporary because I am still waiting for 34-pin ribbon connectors to fit the 1x16 LCD header and the 2x17 connector on the main board.
This is another view showing a little more of the MAIN FPGA board:
(To be continued)