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-   -   Question for the group. Mainly new hams. (https://www.radiobanter.com/policy/106639-question-group-mainly-new-hams.html)

Slow Code October 28th 06 01:30 AM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 
Chuck Harris wrote in
:

Jerry wrote:

Contacts like that still help maintain receiving skill. That's
important if you ever have to use CW to save a life.
but it will never happen since there is no one to send the distress
call
SC
http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/



Oh, really????
How about THIS one? (QRZ) and a newstory from England?

Quote
Morse code used in rescue!

London, 20 October/GNN/ -- MARITIME AND COASTGUARD AGENCY News
Release
(Press Notice: 368_06) issued by The Government News Network on 20
October 2006

Yesterday afternoon just after 5.30pm Hayling Island Coastguard
team
member, Steve Mann, witnessed what he thought was a SOS message flashed
by torchlight towards the Control Tower at Hayling Island Sailing Club.
Steve responded to the SOS message by switching the lights on and off
in the Control Tower.


I would bet that the person flashing SOS knows little, or no morse code
other than SOS.

This, as an argument for hams using CW, is kind of like "mayday" being
an argument for hams being conversant in French.

-Chuck



Spoken like a true "I-Hate-CW" Whiner. Why you even worried about it
anyway, you don't even have a welfare license.

SC

Chuck Harris October 28th 06 02:45 AM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 
Slow Code wrote:
Chuck Harris wrote in


I would bet that the person flashing SOS knows little, or no morse code
other than SOS.

This, as an argument for hams using CW, is kind of like "mayday" being
an argument for hams being conversant in French.

-Chuck



Spoken like a true "I-Hate-CW" Whiner. Why you even worried about it
anyway, you don't even have a welfare license.


Actually, I have held an advanced class ticket for more than 30 years.

I took my test at 1919 M Street, NW? Washington, DC. Under the watchful
eye of an FCC examiner. My code test came off of an old signal corps
paper tape driven code practice machine. The key they gave me to use was
from the same set.

My receiving speed was somewhere around 40wpm, and my sending sucks rope.
I never could master an Iambic keyer.

-Chuck

Not Lloyd October 28th 06 05:03 AM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 

wrote in message
...
On Sat, 28 Oct 2006 00:30:45 GMT, Slow Code wrote:

wrote in
ups.com:


an_old_friend wrote:
wrote:
Slow Code wrote:
wrote in
oups.com:

Looks like Bruce and Dan are back...

I hope 11 meters opens up

I'm sure that you do.

indeed it is likely the sole we see SC is that we are at the bottom of
the sunspot cyle and cb just isn't fun those ilgeal op like SC


I'm sure that he listens to 75M on shortwave and wishes he could
participate.



I don't do much 80 meters, not even listen much.

I enjoy satellite. Amsat life member.

prove it

..............
To who? You? Why? Prove you do EME.



Slow Code October 29th 06 01:07 AM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 
Chuck Harris wrote in
:

Slow Code wrote:
Chuck Harris wrote in


I would bet that the person flashing SOS knows little, or no morse
code other than SOS.

This, as an argument for hams using CW, is kind of like "mayday" being
an argument for hams being conversant in French.

-Chuck



Spoken like a true "I-Hate-CW" Whiner. Why you even worried about it
anyway, you don't even have a welfare license.


Actually, I have held an advanced class ticket for more than 30 years.

I took my test at 1919 M Street, NW? Washington, DC. Under the watchful
eye of an FCC examiner. My code test came off of an old signal corps
paper tape driven code practice machine. The key they gave me to use
was from the same set.

My receiving speed was somewhere around 40wpm, and my sending sucks
rope. I never could master an Iambic keyer.

-Chuck



Once you master the electronic key you'll wonder how you ever got by
without one. I used a straight key for years and then got an electronic
one. It made code more fun. I tried a bug once, but after using the
electronic key I lost my timing on the side to side stuff.

One thing for sure in the maritime story above, someone did know morse,
and the rescuers probably weren't going to wait for a full message after
the sos. they would start the rescue right away, they didn't need to see a
message.

SC

an_old_friend October 29th 06 01:30 AM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 

Slow Code wrote:
Chuck Harris wrote in
:



Once you master the electronic key you'll wonder how you ever got by
without one. I used a straight key for years and then got an electronic
one. It made code more fun. I tried a bug once, but after using the
electronic key I lost my timing on the side to side stuff.


meaning you can't use CW MANUALY and you demand of me


Dave October 29th 06 12:42 PM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 
an_old_friend

I'm very tired of your whining. No-one is demanding anything of you except to
stop whining. If you can't copy CW then give it up!

an_old_friend wrote:

Slow Code wrote:

Chuck Harris wrote in
:



Once you master the electronic key you'll wonder how you ever got by
without one. I used a straight key for years and then got an electronic
one. It made code more fun. I tried a bug once, but after using the
electronic key I lost my timing on the side to side stuff.



meaning you can't use CW MANUALY and you demand of me



Slow Code October 30th 06 12:55 AM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 
"Markie in the Darkie" wrote in
oups.com:


Slow Code wrote:
Chuck Harris wrote in
:



Once you master the electronic key you'll wonder how you ever got by
without one. I used a straight key for years and then got an
electronic one. It made code more fun. I tried a bug once, but after
using the electronic key I lost my timing on the side to side stuff.


meaning you can't use CW MANUALY and you demand of me



Markie you blithering idiot. You're against being a knowledgable ham so
bad you have no clue what I was even talking about.

SC


RadioGuy November 2nd 06 04:28 AM

Question for the group. Mainly new hams.
 
In article k.net,
says...
Chuck Harris wrote in
:

Slow Code wrote:

Big Ten-Four on that Good Buddy.
It sounds like you run a lot of 11m, not surprising considering how
much you whine, and it's not alternator whine.


I only typed like because I knew you would understand that style of
communicating. So, after your license came in the mail what I
appliance did you decide to buy? MFJ? Alinco? Cobra?



While you are being all holier than thou, what did you design and build
for your main rig? I'm hoping to be impressed, but expecting to be
disappointed.

Did the code help you with the design?

I took my Advanced class test down at 1919 M street 36 years ago. I had
to sit at the desk and copy one solid minute out of five error free at
13WPM. I passed it on the first try. I almost failed the sending test,
as I had never spent much time doing that. I had never made a code
contact before my test, and I have only made a couple since.

The thing about code contacts is they never seem to want to say anything
beyond:

WA3XXX DE W6XX RST 5NN WX FB 73 W6XX SK



Contacts like that still help maintain receiving skill. That's important
if you ever have to use CW to save a life.

SC

How are you going to save a life with CW? If someone is having a heart
attack he's not going to be steady enough to type out an SOS to you.

No planes use morse code. No ships do either. Just who do you think is
going to send you an SOS?


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