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I started laughing when I saw/heard the correction and said to my wife "I wonder if anyone else notices the error, and now the correction?" I did a google search which led me here. LOL |
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Wayne wrote:
In whatever case ....on CBS "Sunday Morning" today, I heard the commercial with the corrected morse. It now says "S O S", with word spacing between the characters. Wonder if they got "helpful feedback" from the ham community. :) I received an email from a ham saying that he had contacted Prudential and they had promised to correct the Morse code S O S sounds. Is the following true? ___ SOS is usually sent as a prosign, i.e. a single dit between tones? -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com |
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"Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... Wayne wrote: In whatever case ....on CBS "Sunday Morning" today, I heard the commercial with the corrected morse. It now says "S O S", with word spacing between the characters. Wonder if they got "helpful feedback" from the ham community. :) I received an email from a ham saying that he had contacted Prudential and they had promised to correct the Morse code S O S sounds. Is the following true? ___ SOS is usually sent as a prosign, i.e. a single dit between tones? -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com - I have never heard that is was sent as a prosign, but IMHO it would sound weird. --Wayne |
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In article ,
"Wayne" wrote: "Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... snip SOS is usually sent as a prosign, i.e. a single dit between tones? -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com - I have never heard that is was sent as a prosign, but IMHO it would sound weird. --Wayne Back in 1949-1950 when I got my first ticket as W8EZE and became the trustee for the Walnut Hills High School amateur radio club in Cincinnati, the club had one of those World War Two devices to be used in lifeboats, with a crank on top, which you held between your legs while turning the crank. It had an antenna terminal to which we attached a dummy load. It had no other controls or terminals, just the crank and an antenna terminal. I think it only put out a few watts. Listening on 500 kc/s (as we called them, in those days) on I think a BC348 receiver, while turning the crank one heard .. . . _ _ _ . . . (long space) . . . _ _ _ . . . (long space), and on and on, as if you were sending one character with nine components, over and over again. You could write it as ___ SOS the same way one can write __ BT for a double dash, or __ DN for a fraction bar (forward slash). David, ex-W8EZE, who can still picture and and remember hearing the thing -- it was orange -- David Ryeburn To send e-mail, use "ca" instead of "caz". |
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In article ,
David Ryeburn wrote: In article , "Wayne" wrote: "Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... snip SOS is usually sent as a prosign, i.e. a single dit between tones? -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com - I have never heard that is was sent as a prosign, but IMHO it would sound weird. --Wayne Back in 1949-1950 when I got my first ticket as W8EZE and became the trustee for the Walnut Hills High School amateur radio club in Cincinnati, the club had one of those World War Two devices to be used in lifeboats, with a crank on top, which you held between your legs while turning the crank. It had an antenna terminal to which we attached a dummy load. It had no other controls or terminals, just the crank and an antenna terminal. I think it only put out a few watts. Listening on 500 kc/s (as we called them, in those days) on I think a BC348 receiver, while turning the crank one heard . . . _ _ _ . . . (long space) . . . _ _ _ . . . (long space), and on and on, as if you were sending one character with nine components, over and over again. You could write it as ___ SOS the same way one can write __ BT for a double dash, or __ DN for a fraction bar (forward slash). David, ex-W8EZE, who can still picture and and remember hearing the thing -- it was orange It was called a "Gibson Girl" |
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"Bert Hyman" wrote in message ... In Cecil Moore wrote: Has anyone else noticed that the Prudential commercial on TV is sending SMS instead of SOS? Finally saw a commercial that's probably the one you're talking about. It sounded more like "VMS" to me, but based strictly on the dots and dashes, ignoring the timing, it was "SOS." -- Bert Hyman St. Paul, MN - After hearing the "corrected" version of the commercial where "S O S" was definitely sent.....I again heard the "original" version on a different channel. So, they have two versions now. BTW, I still copy "VTTS". --Wayne W5GIE |
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billm wrote:
'Cecil Moore[_2_ Wrote: ;692592']Has anyone else noticed that the Prudential commercial on TV is sending SMS instead of SOS? -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, http://www.w5dxp.com If you listen carefully, I think they are sending VMS. You could make the case that it's a really bad "fist" trying to send SOS. You guys beat this one to death surely! How about a new one? Analysis of the MASH episode where the 4077th performs a bris by Morse code. - 73 de Mike N3LI - |
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After hearing the "corrected" version of the commercial where "S O S" was definitely sent.....I again heard the "original" version on a different channel. So, they have two versions now. BTW, I still copy "VTTS". --Wayne W5GIE Perhaps it was sent by Hashfisti Scratchi. John Ferrell W8CCW |
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