How strange! -
In particular:
[i]"So, we then fitted the resistor and capacitor together in parallel and then in series with the potentiometer (220 ohm and 0.047uF). This seemed to do nothing different than the 0.047uF capacitor alone at all. As far as my ears could tell exactly the same effect, no change in loudness at either end of the range."[/i]
Usually, with the default values (R23=10k, R24=4.7k) these would form a potential divider (attenuator) reducing the signal to 1/3rd (0.319)of the value seen across D4 (this is calculated on DC.. The capacitor acts as frequency dependent resistance for AC signals). With R24 at 220 ohms, the attenuation would be (1/(10k+220))*220 = 0.0215 ... Even allowing for the exponential nature of loudness, one should hardly have heard any signal at all! (cant be bothered to calculate the db's right now)
I suspect some physical problem (220k resistor instead of 220 ohm resistor, faulty / miswired preset, wrong connections - something like that..)
[i]"We went from 0.001uF to 1.0uF"[/i]
Presumably the original 4700pF (0.0047uF) capacitor was still on the board..
[i] The effect of values below 0.047uF was that the "waveform" knob still changed the tone when turned clockwise, however it's effect diminished until with the 0.047 capacitor it stopped effecting the sound. Still no change in the loudness at any point in the range.[/i]
Ok,
[i]" We got all the way up to 1.0uF and still, the Etherwave sounds exactly like it did without the mod when the "waveform" was turn fully counterclockwise, just that now turning it clockwise does nothing at all. "[/i]
This does not make sense - you should hear SOME change in the tonal quality as you increase the capacitance from say 100nF to 470nf, or certainly from 100nF to 1uF.
The ONLY thing I can think of here is that, at about 100nF, you have reduced all audible harmonics to below hearing - and that you have a pure sine wave at this point .. but that this sine wave is being distorted by some subsequent part.
If you have access to an oscilloscope, check the waveform across the capacitor (GND - Audio on the connector).. Alternatively, connect an amplifier to this point and see if the sound you get here is cleaner than the sound you are getting from the EW output... You will not be able to control the volume, but it would be a valuable clue.
[i]"One thing did change though, with the 1.0uF capacitor in place, the "brightness" (or as I've always called it, "distortion") no longer changes the tone, but now acts as a volume knob. All the way ccw and the Etherwave is full volume, all the way cw and it's muted. A very nice side effect."[/i]
I have no explanation at this time.. To be honest, I expected this to be a quick "Yeah, it sounds great" or "Nah, it only starts to sound ok when there isnt any volume" or "it changes the sound, but its like shoving cotton wool into the speaker" (I actually expected the latter response!) - After all, its just changing a capacitor in a simple RC filter... I should have known better! I should have learned by now that even a simple RC filter becomes a quagmire with bloody Theremins! DAMN THEM - They are stealing my life!! ;-)
[i]"But through all this, the tone is still the same as it ever was. You can hear this best in the lower part of the range. Low notes kind of go "dur dur dur dur dur" like they have a forced staccato instead of "duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuur". [/i] -
I think this is possibly a big clue.. but, as I have said (I think) - I do not own an EW.. This 'sounds' to me that the reference and variable oscillators are drifting in and out of lock.. and that if this is a regular "Durr Durr" it could indicate a problem such as power pulsing or beating with something else... Thierry! We need an EW expert!
[i]"So, seems that what we've achieved is a quick dirty hack to turn the "brightness" control into a volume