"The antenna capacitance equations are straightforward. A handful of places quote the cylindrical capacitance formula from which you can estimate the change in capacitance due to the hand and its cross-sectional area. (JPascal and Skeldon)" - innominataI think you are referring to this paper?hysics of the ThereminKenneth D. Skeldon, Lindsay M. Reid, Viviene McInally, Brendan Dougan,and Craig Fulton. 1998- If so, the formula for the antenna intrinsic capacitance (C in free space) is OK. - The formula for mutual capacitance (between antenna and hand) is total crap. I used it for a long time before I collected real data and good sim data, and it really led me astray. The authors clearly just hand waved their way through that derivation and left it to the rest of the world to test."For this I'm using a common emitter npn Colpitts oscillator followed by a buffer stage. The topology seems simple enough that I'm comfortable with it at the time. The values here are based on Skeldon, initially I simulated the one on electronics tutorials with the radio frequency choke but it didn't seem to have an effect so I left it out."I really wouldn't trust anything in that paper. Just glancing at it, the capacitance looks rather high and the impedance rather low at the pick-off point for the antenna. I don't do this for a living, but my main criterion for good Theremin oscillators is large voltage swing at the antenna.[EDIT] Just noticed your reference to "radio frequency choke" above. Oscillators that are designed to operate with a series choke going to the antenna are really different animals that those that don't use a choke. You can't take one with a choke and just remove it, you can't take one without a choke and just add it. For choke oscillators the choke itself is doing a lot of resonating and voltage multiplying (via Q), and when its resonance "fights" with the oscillator LC resonance you can sometimes increase pitch field linearity, but you have to carefully design it to do so. For your first Theremin I would recommend you use a non series choke type oscillator as they are much easier to tune.
Oodles of useful information. I didn't know what the RFC could practically be used for because this is somehow my first exposure to oscillators.
That's the Skeldon paper I was looking at. Thank you for that heads up! This is the kind of information that can save weeks of time.