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Old January 14th 07, 09:06 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy
Stefan Wolfe Stefan Wolfe is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Dec 2006
Posts: 179
Default One way to promote learning of code ...


"Michael Black" wrote in message
...

If it looks and sounds like CW, then it is CW.


If the carrier of a double sideband AM signal is not keyed on and off, it is
not true CW, no matter how it sounds.

I think the problem is that you are incorrectly equating A1 "CW" to A2 "MCW"
(tone modulated continuous wave).

Actually, MCW is an oxymoron. Although you can have a wave continuously
modulated by tone, you cannot have a continuous wave if the wave is
continuously modulated. It should be WCM, not MCW :-)

You obviously know the difference. A1 CW must meet the emission requirement
of on/off keying of the carrier - only.


In other words, it's the results that matter. You can't get those
results with a microphone, and that's why it's not CW.


I agree with the latter.

Nothing is true "CW" except keyed double sideband carrier (A1A). That
doesn't mean it isn't Morse (or Farnsworth :-)). True CW is very narrowly
defined in its emission characteristic. It is only a technical point. You
can call tone modulated carrier "CW" if you wish but that does not agree
with the FCC definition in designating the US CW sub-bands.

And yes, MCW will let you listen to 1 Mhz on a cheap AM radio while a zero
beat oscillator is needed to hear A1A on a cheap AM radio (I had overlooked
that simple fact before).