View Single Post
  #23   Report Post  
Old September 4th 03, 12:44 AM
Jack Twilley
 
Posts: n/a
Default

=2D----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

"Dick" =3D=3D Dick Carroll; writes:


Jack In my limited experience, I learn more characters faster with
Jack Farnsworth spacing, but I'm concerned that I'm building a lookup
Jack table instead of reflexes. It's the difference between
Jack "dahdidah, hmm, that's K, dahdah, hmm, that's M" and "dahdidah
Jack (K) dahdah (M)". I learned eight or nine characters with
Jack Farnsworth spacing, but I can't repeat the performance at full
Jack speed, so I fear that I'm learning something that won't be
Jack useful if I continue to use Farnsworth spacing.

Dick That's where practice comes in. Learn to recognize the
Dick characters, then listen to code off the air or what ever othen
Dick non-familiar source you may have available. Soon you find that
Dick you don't use anything like a looktable any more, it just comes
Dick in as letters, and then words that you recognize like
Dick speech. The more familiar you become, the longer words begin to
Dick come through as words, just like the shorter ones did earlier,
Dick and so on it goes. You build a Morse vocabulary of words. But
Dick it does take practice.

I do have a couple of questions, though. Which spacing is more
commonly found in "real code" -- full speed or Farnsworth spacing?
When people learn to receive code with Farnsworth spacing, do they
also learn to send with Farnsworth spacing? Those two things have
puzzled me but I haven't found any real answers.

Dick 73, Dick

Jack.
=2D --=20
Jack Twilley
jmt at twilley dot org
http colon slash slash www dot twilley dot org slash tilde jmt slash
=2D----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.2.2 (FreeBSD)

iD8DBQE/VnzJGPFSfAB/ezgRAmgSAJ9kWL79zA3NPXd1QBCa2DVsKPPe3ACgg0pj
+omyMz+c0Q2ICr/udLl7tUw=3D
=3DgbEB
=2D----END PGP SIGNATURE-----