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On 5/29/2016 4:39 PM, gareth G4SDW GQRP #3339 wrote:
Suddenly it has clicked after setting up the IC728 for Jim - the reason that some Morse keys had a shorting switch must have been to provide a continuous key-down position for tuning the TX and ATU! At least in the US: The switch, e.g. on a J-38 key from WWII, dates from before there were tube circuits to be peaked or dipped! On the old telegraph lines, the ancestors of current loop circuits, all the keys and sounders on a large network were simply in series, with a battery also in the circuit. If your key were open, then nobody else could "talk". So you had to short the key when not actually sending. And of course as soon as a switch like that is a "tradition" it is likely to appear on devices long after that need has disappeared. Bob Wilson, WA9D (I think Gareth really meant that as a complaint about some of the always-key-down operators, and I would agree! But I could not leave it alone.) |
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