I wrote on the “Etherwave Pro ??” topic [i]“But I do not think disclosing the Epro 'secret' would advance science, engineering, Theremin development, or the interests of Epro owners at all”[/i] – but I now, after much thought, and some discussion with another person who is “in the know”, think that I was wrong on this.
In fact, I now wonder if Bob Moog deliberately “hid” the secret as a means of delaying its disclosure (which he MUST have known was inevitable) for long enough that the E-Pro would become established as a revered musical instrument, and, when its modus operandi was disclosed, this would shatter once and for all the bogus assertions made by many regarding the use of simple digital technology in musical instruments.
Unfortunately, I was one of these people – I regarded analogue as sacred, I believed that any “true” Theremin needed analogue heterodyning of the actual waveforms from the pitch and reference oscillators, or from something that effectively tracked and duplicated these waveforms at multiplied frequency ratios (my strategy for my ultimate Theremin) – To me, these waveforms, carrying their varying harmonic contents (due to oscillator interaction mainly, but, I believed, also due to subtle interactions with other fields), is what really made a genuine Theremin sound.
I was embarking on obtaining (hiring or borrowing) an E-Pro with the idea of producing a Technical Reference Manual for it .. Through discussions about this project, I got one Theremin Engineer to disclose the E-Pro “Secret” .. What I learned stunned me – I have admired Bob since I was about 14 – I have read everything from and about him I could, I spent my pocket money obtaining copies of his patents (which, in the days before the Internet, and living in South Africa, was not easy or cheap).. I learned analogue electronics from Bob – He, and the Synthesizer, were the reason I got into Electronics.. Yes - its stupid - but I felt betrayed.
I got hold of an E-Pro to verify what I had been told – And discovered that it was true.. Alas, my disgust and disillusionment (which I now realize was due to little more than irrational prejudice against using CMOS logic to produce sounds) caused me to abandon extensive examination of the E-Pro.. I had seen its secret, and its secret jarred against everything I believed about music technology – This was a sad, gut reaction mistake.. I should have looked more carefully beyond the tone generation stage, and at the wave-shaping and filtering sections – as these (I later realized) must be where the magic resides.
I must admit that, before I learned the 'secret' I did not like the tones I had heard from the E-Pro.. My interest in it was focussed on its linearity and range switching, and think this biased me away from further exploration - but since that time I have heard some wonderful tones from it - particularly from Peter's performances.. He seems to get the best from this instrument - for example in his "lemminkainens dream" - so I now really regret my predudice.
Here is a brief synopsis of how the E-Pro works.. More specifically, how it achieves its range switching, how it produces its CORE tone, and how it improves pitch linearity.
1.) The oscillators are conventional and analogue
2.) The waveforms from these oscillators are squared – they are converted to ‘digital’ signals and lose any 'relevant' or 'natural' harmonic data they may carry
3.) These squared oscillators signals are then fed to standard CMOS logic circuits – dividers, multiplexers etc.. Both oscillator frequencies are divided and the square waves from the selected pair of dividers (selection being controlled by the range switch) are fed to a CMOS XOR (Exclusive Or) gate.<