Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "KØHB" wrote in message ink.net... VE3NEA has written a very sophisticated morse trainer. It supports Win 95 through XP, and implements QRN, QRM, QSB, flutter and even LIDs! Adjustable cw pitch, bandwidth, and RIT are included. Go to www.dxatlas.com and look for "Morse Runner" 73, de Hans, K0HB -- http://www.home.earthlink.net/~k0hb Hello, Hans Some folks I'm reading in the thread might have preferred the method in RMA school. You *will* copy 16 words per minute before you graduate. You *will* graduate in (was it 8 weeks? I forget). Or else. Vietnam was hot. No one wanted the "fail and sail" option. People *did* learn Morse code in record time ![]() BTW, they had recently reduced the code speed when I was in RMA school in 1967. I believe it had been 18 words per minute and they had reduced it to 16. Oh yes, you had to memorize the BAUDOT code also. After leaving the service, I was working at Kodak and took a part time job at WADD in Brockport, NY, a small am radio station. I was in a rush and ripped copy from the teletype. The guy breaking me in was watching over my shoulder as I started the news. LOL ... right in the middle of one article the teletype took a hit and shifted out of letters and into gibberish. I read right through it. After we went back to the records he asked "how in hell did you do that?". I told him 4 years in the Navy running teletypes tend to do that to you. I was used to it. ![]() Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "JAMES HAMPTON" wrote Some folks I'm reading in the thread might have preferred the method in RMA school. You *will* copy 16 words per minute before you graduate. You *will* graduate in (was it 8 weeks? I forget). Or else. Never had the pleasure of RMA school. Although I was a ham, out of boot camp they sent me to RDA school at GLakes. Reported aboard my first tin-can as an RDSN on a Saturday. On Monday AM the PN's checked me in and introducted me to the Ops Boss who saw I was a ham. Turned out they had a surplus of scope dopes, but needed some RM's in the worst way, so he "temporarily" assigned me to OC instead of OI division. Thus ended my short career as an RD and started my career as an RM. Years later BuPers still had canniptions about my gundecked rate change. After leaving the service, I was working at Kodak and took a part time job at WADD in Brockport, NY, a small am radio station. I was in a rush and ripped copy from the teletype. The guy breaking me in was watching over my shoulder as I started the news. LOL ... right in the middle of one article the teletype took a hit and shifted out of letters and into gibberish. Worse than that were the model-28s whose stunt box inadvertently had the "unshift-on-space" toggled on. Then get a 4-section logreq which is 85% numerals and have to mentally bit-shift that summabitch back to figs so the SK's could read it! 73, de Hans, K0HB |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "JAMES HAMPTON"
writes: they had recently reduced the code speed when I was in RMA school in 1967. I believe it had been 18 words per minute and they had reduced it to 16. It's my understanding that back in 1957-58, the standard for Radioman "A" school was 24 wpm. 5 letter coded groups on a Navy mill. Test lasted one hour with no more than 3 errors permitted. Now *that's* proficiency! 73 de Jim, N2EY |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FA: Unbuilt Heathkit ET3200 Digital Trainer | Boatanchors | |||
Heathkit digital trainer .AC powered | Homebrew | |||
Heathkit digital trainer .AC powered | Homebrew | |||
FA Heathkit electronics trainer . LN works | Boatanchors | |||
FA Heathkit electronics trainer . LN works | Boatanchors |