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"Stefan Wolfe" ) writes:
wrote in message ups.com... The big question is whether the signals (keyed carrier vs. keyed audio tone) look different on a spectrum analyzer. If they don't, why should FCC care? I agree that it doesn't matter to the FCC as long is the keyed audio tone is coupled to the radio with EM waves such as with light (optoisolators), RF or wires (electrical connections). However, if you couple the keyed audio carrier acoustically, speaker-to-mike using only sound waves, then that is J3E and only permissible in the voice portion of the band. If I were to whistle nearly pure sine waves (I am a good whistler, perhaps you have seen paintings of my mother :-)) in Morse code into the mike input, it might look like CW and sound like CW but it would really be J3E, hence illegal in the CW sub-bands. Using acoustic coupling (J3E), it becomes a slippery slope; first computer generated tones, then human whistling, then humming and before you know it, "talking" (di dah di dah etc.. and finally, "words" :-)) But it could never be A1, because it doesn't meet the criteria of a pure tone into a good SSB transmitter. I doubt however good a whistler you are, that you can guarantee it's a sine wave and doesn't include any peripheral noise. And that microphone is bound to pick up background noise, so you aren't sending a CW signal. Also, the speaker and microphone, if putting a tone oscillator into the transmitter that way, may add distortion to the tone, which then means you don't have a CW signal. If it looks and sounds like CW, then it is CW. But your examples aren't about sending CW, because you'd be sending peripheral audio along with the tone. In other words, it's the results that matter. You can't get those results with a microphone, and that's why it's not CW. Michael VE2BVW |
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