Microphonics .. Probably for geeks and nerds only
Hijack continued.. LOL ;-)
My first thoughts (which I posted shortly after I thought about theremin microphonics following HO-2010) was that the antenna was the 'vibrating' component - but this hypothesis failed because I noticed more harmonics the further my hand was from the pitch antenna (at the bass end) - at first I put this down to frequency response of the circuitry and my hearing (the higher the pitch, the less audible harmonics are 'available').
But experiments showed this did not seem to be the mechanism.. The mechanism(s) seems to be that, as the hand capacitance reduces, the tiny changes in capacitance (unmeasurable except by monitoring the oscillator waveform) become more significant.. removing my hand and tuning the reference oscillator to vary the audio frequency, I could see distortion on the VFO waveform which was proportional to the volume level - and sweeping this frequency I was able to find audio frequencies where there was more distortion than others - Even when cranked up loud, and at 'optimal' frequencies, the distortion was difficult to see (particularly on the heterodyned audio) and it really surprised me that it had made such a difference -
Also, I found that if I held the pitch constant, even at 'optimal' settings, I did not hear any 'improvement' in the sound even though I could see a tiny change in the waveshape.
BUT - If I changed the frequency, I could certainly hear something different - this 'acoustic' quality that I believe I can hear in that melodia video -
Here is my hypothesis:
Microphonics set the cabinet resonating, lets say that the resonances are complex - one gets probably a major peak, lower peaks and harmonics of these, entirely dependent on the acoustic properties of the cabinet.
Lets say one had a major resonance at 200Hz, another lower at 400Hz, then some other resonances from the side panels giving smaller peaks at 1k, 2k etc - then one gets phase cancellations depending on where susceptable components are placed..
Now, the audio is at 200Hz, moving up - At 200Hz one gets a lot of FM, but, as the frequency moves up, it does not kill the 200Hz oscillations in the cabinet immediately - so one gets say 250Hz being FM modulated with a decaying 200Hz signal - at the same time one picks up any other resonances, and ends up with a complex FM "delay line" which 'retains' qualities from the notes one has just gone past..... This is exactly the type of interaction which I suspect gives a sound a more 'acoustic' quality - too tiny to seem to make any difference, almost impossible to see with a scope, it really shouldnt make any difference...
The same is true for tubes - Microphony was seen as a curse, and tubes were (and are) built as much as possible to eliminate this curse.. But all tubes are still microphonic to some degree. One gets tiny mechanical vibrations of the grid WRT the cathode in particular... Not enough to see anything with a 'scope mostly - but perhaps enough to hear? IMO, Tube amps always sound best when the volume is cranked up - and, IMO, the best sounding tube amps are the ones which are built into the same enclosure as the speaker.
I think that perhaps we have an aspect of our sense of hearing which we have 'forgotten' about but which is still active - it probably evolved for some purpose other than to help us identify the difference between acoustic and electronic instruments (LOL ;-) but I suspect it is probably to do with determining spacial aspectsof our environment - subtle resonances and the like giving us subconcious clues about the matter arround us.. In musical instruments we can hear the difference between a acoustic grand and any electric piano - and I think this will probably always be true - To make a real total simulation, one would need to model every interaction of every micro and macro component with each other, and you would have to make every component responsive to every sound and vibration of its environment.. Even when not being played, the mere presence of a grand piano on a stage will alter the sounds that the audience hears when the rest of the band is playing.
Fred.