"The old school I refer to is that the pitch fields Fred and I develop are completely different in the way they respond. The differences have been expressed numerous times in the past. It's too bad engineers are blind to this method I have demonstrated many times, as this hurts the theremin community." - Christopher
Chris,
I really thought we had got over "nature of the pitch field" argument, and if, after "10 years of 8 hour daily hands on research" you have not seen that there is more to the pitch than just the distance to the nearest ground point, well - we either live in different universes where the fundamental charactaristics are different, or I am at a complete loss as to how you have observed what you claim to have observed, and how you have drawn the conclusions you have come to.
Usually, when I make a statement, I prefix it with IMO - Certainty is not something I am comfortable with.. But on this matter there is no "IMO" - Regardless of the mechanism (I am sure the mechanism is capacitive - but that is almost irrelevant) the effect of AREA AND DISTANCE on pitch can be demonstrated - Try the experiment I detailed in my last post - I will bet everything I own that a small grounded point at any distance from the pitch antenna will have less effect on the pitch than a larger grounded point at the same distance.
In Peters last post he gave a clear description of how pitch can be altered by changing body position - I have seen Lydia use this method - I believe the reason this works is due to the TOTAL capacitance "seen" by the antenna determining the pitch - But even if capacitance was not the mechanism, the effect is real, and the capacitance "hypothesis" fully explains what is actually observable.
Maths? There really need not be any to understand this, but simply multiplying a (changing) fraction by a constant isnt "maths" its simple arithmetic. One could take any instant that a theremin is being played, and analyse the distance and area of every ground point reletive to the antenna, and from this accurately compute what the pitch would be - every point would return a value, and summing all these values would give total capacitance (or "whatever" if not capacitance) seen.
"It's too bad engineers are blind to this method I have demonstrated many times" What has any of this to do with "method"? If you were right, and the pitch was determined soley by the closest ground point to the antenna, then the theremin would be even less playable than it is in the universe I inhabit, where both area and distance (ie total capacitance) determines the pitch.
I am truly sorry that I expressed my disagreement with your statements - But (being who I am for better or worse) I had no choice but to do so. I do not believe it helps anyone to play the theremin if their fundamental understanding of the mechanisms are wrong - as, if anything " hurts the theremin community" this does - Also, I am passionate about science, and feel compelled to challenge blatant errors when they appear, If this comes over as a personal "attack" I am truly sorry.
Fred.