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![]() "Michael Black" wrote in message mple.org... On Mon, 25 Aug 2008, Richard Knoppow wrote: "W9HGO" wrote in message ... GM, I am a new ham interested in CW and would really like to find an operators manual written before the topic of CW started to be diluted. I would prefer a 1st or 2nd edition. TNX 73, Harry W9HGO -SKCC #4647 Do you mean a Radio Amateurs Handbook? If so look at this group, some have been advertized in the last couple of weeks. The books may be helpful if you want to build CW transmitting equipment but its very simple (one of the virtues of CW). If you want to learn code there are a lot of resources on the web. I thought the question was clear. The Handbook had to cover everything, so it could never cover it all in depth. You'd get a copy of "How to Become a Radio Amateur" to learn the basics, and maybe build that first regen receiver and single tube transmitter, and learn the code. If you needed more help, you'd buy "Learning the Radiotelegraph Code"; I never had a copy, I don't know how it compares with more recent books about learning the Morse code from the ARRL. You'd buy the Handbook next, to cover technical stuff in more detail. Then you'd buy the mobile manual if you wanted to go mobile, or the SSB manual if you were really interested in SSB (especially in the early days when they covered theory of ssb better than in the later ones that were mostly construction articles), and you'd get the VHF manual if that was your interest. If you were mostly interested in operating, you'd get "Operating an Amateur Radio Station" which was sort of an extended version of the "Operating a Station" chapter in the Handbook. I never saw one in the old days, but my impression was that it was a relatively slim, like the rest of the topic-specific ARRL books. The current one is terribly thick. That's the one he wants, to read up on operating CW when it was a much bigger part of amateur radio. The old books have the advantage that they are current with the era. The state of the Handbook varies, since every time something new is added to the hobby (and thus the Handbook), something else gets cut. There was a long period when SSB got short shift, because the initial surge of SSB was passed and there seemed to be an assumption that everyone knew the basics. Likely also the rise of commercial SSB rigs helped. Then building changed, and a lot of people started building QRP ssb rigs and the ssb chapter improved. Solid state and even computers came along and helped to better implement the phasing method, and whammo, the phasing method that had been mostly a footnote in the Handbook for many years suddenly became more detailed. Michael VE2BVW A good, comprehensive answer but I don't think the original question was quite as clear as you think. Also, the name of the book requires some clarification: you may be right that he wants "How to Operate an Amateur Radio Station" but I am not sure how old a first or second edition would be. In any case the older ARRL handbooks cover a lot of CW stuff like handling traffic etc. Being a long time CW person myself perhaps it seems simpler to me than to someone new. I certainly encourage anyone to wants to practice this art. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA |
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