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![]() K=D8HB wrote: "cl" wrote in message o.verio.net... I hope someone from the military can step in to tell us how much time they were given to get the code down. I think they had to "Cram". Navy RM "A" School, the basic school which trained Navy Radiomen, was 13-weeks long. Morse practice was 3 hours per day, 4 days per week, but students could come in after-hours for additional practice. Graduation requirement was to be able to copy 5-letter coded groups at 18WPM for 10 minutes, with 3 uncorrected errors allowed. 156 hours worth of in-class code parctice and a pretty stiff exam. Sounds familaiar. I didn't clock it but the 156 hours total is probably in the realm I needed to get from zero to 20WPM. Which in my case was stretched out over years between the 5/13/20 WPM exams. I've heard some weird tales about how the Signal Corps used Draconian methods to quickly pound Morse into the heads of their WW2 radio ops. Stories about eight-hours-per-day seven days per weeks drills for 2-4 weeks or some such, nasty punishments for those who "didn't get it", etc. Have you ever heard any of these tales? =20 73, de Hans, K0HB w3rv |
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