" -800ppm/C for the 6310 is pretty horrible for Theremin use! " -- dewster
I’ve been playing around with a simulator, and it turns out that a temperature drift of +/- 800 ppm for the equalizing coil isn’t that fatal:
The black curve shows the original curve for EWS with an equalizing coil of 30 mH. On its sides are two curves corresponding to an increase and decrease of inductance by 800 ppm (i.e. for +/- 1 degree Celsius). As you can see, the zero-beat point shift is only about 5 cm. However, for, say, 10 degrees, it will be much more fatal!
It’s also interesting to know which inductance drift has a stronger effect on the “zero point” shift. Below are two more graphs, where the first one changes the inductance of the variated pitch oscillator (VPO), and the second one changes the fixed pitch oscillator (FPO). Both changes are +/-800 ppm:
And here is the result of their simultaneous (“correlated”) drift:
It’s evident that the total drift is not compensated – this is due to the non-identity of the circuits, i.e., the presence of an equalizing coil in one of the oscillators. But the most interesting thing is that the magnitude of the total drift turns out to be the same as that of the equalizing coil’s drift, but opposite in sign.
Therefore (and this is the main point!), the trick is that if all three coils have the same drift, the “zero point” will stay in place: