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Fred Roberts wrote:
On 19/01/2016 18:44, gareth wrote: With the apparent interest that youngsters have in Enigma Machines, and the like, if we could excite them about Morse Code, then, if attracted to amateur radio, they could realise a complete station for an outlay of under £100, and build it themselves and get the _REAL_ radio amateur kick! Have taken part in a number of highly successful high profile special event stations the one thing that excited visitors both old and new was CW. Nothing else came close, we had hordes of kids lining up What does Gareth usually say about hams who try and attract youngsters to the hobby? to have their name transmitted in morse and to play with oscillators. When running pileups with qso's being displayed in real time on a computer display adults were amazed at: 1. The distances involved 2. The speed of contacts 3. The bouncing around between countries/continents The exact same can be said of any phone pile-up at a public event. Digimodes bore the public and someone talking on sideband/FM/DV/repeater is just a **** talking sh!te into a microphone. CW is the mode par excellence for attracting new comers. Perhaps the larger clubs could consider paying the exam fees for candidates if those candidates can show proper proficiency in Morse? Great idea! It is Morse QSOs that the traditional friendliness still survives. It is in morse code, home construction and tinkering that friendliness and real amateur radio survives. What a bizarre and emotional rant. -- STC // M0TEY // twitter.com/ukradioamateur |