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From: "K=D8=88B" on Thurs,Apr 14 2005 7:18 am
"K4YZ" wrote in message oups.com... Didn't Hans put that well into the 70's for the Navy? No, Hans didn't. The last significant use of Morse in the Navy was in the late 50's/early 60's. This usage was by small-boys, DD and smaller, on "fox" broadcasts and "A1" ship/shore circuits. Both uses ended with fleetwide deployment of Jason and Orestes circuits in the early 60's. Morse training for general duty Navy RM's ceased at the same time, and Morse operator became a specialized NEC (MOS to you grunts) held by only a few sailors, mostly in SPECOM branches (intercept operators, etc.). The single operational Morse use which survived was the VLF SSBN transmissions (two transmitters, one Cutler, ME and the other at Jim Creek, WA). That was a simple slow-speed beaconing system which notified boomers to pop up their satcomm antennas for the actual communications. 73, de Hans, K0HB Master Chief Radioman, US Navy Thank you for factual corroboration, Hans. As far as I know now, the VLF stations evolved into ELF but at different locations. According to a USN Fact Sheet those locations are at Clam Lake, WI, in the Chequamegon National Forest (operational since 1985) and Republic, MI (operational since 1989). The Republic station is synchronized in time with Clam Lake, all under operational control of NCTAMS LANT headquarters at Norfolk, VA. Their transmission protocol is "Deep Black" slow-speed data and the Boomers' (and Shark's) electronics rooms (what used to be a tiny "radio room" cubicle in WW2 boats) have "Black" ELF receivers always on-line (as are their automatic decoders) for Alerts. For an illustration of a Boomer electronics room, go to the www.fas.org site and search down through a maze of internal links to USN stuff; take info there as old and not containing all the juicy details but has the appearance of unclassified USN documents. My nephew-in-law was an electrician's mate on a shark, involved with reactor power plants, not radio. All he said about his shark boat's electronics room was "we couldn't hang around in there." :-) There was no such thing as a "nuclear boat/ship" in Canada or any other Navy during WW2. The only encryption used by the USA (and Canada as well as the UK) was the "Sigaba" as shown on the USS Pampanito floating museum and at the NSA on-line Museum. The "Sigaba" system (TTY), upgraded to post-WW2 standards was severely compromised by the capture of the USS Pueblo off the North Korean coast in 1968. The replacement system was compromised by CWO Walker who was convicted of espionage and is serving a federal life term. The present encryption methods are apparently two generations later than the Walker- compromised crypto systems...and quite secure. The original "Sigaba" on-line TTY crypto terminal was first installed in the 1940s and used to relay intercepts of the infamous "14-part" diplomatic message of Japan that was supposed to be the formal start of the Japanese declaration of a state of war. "Sigaba" was later used to coordinate USN fleet movements to enable the success of the Battle of Midway. That TTY encryption was never compromised through intercepts. It was compromised by actual capture of later-generation hardware on the USS Pueblo. The "Sigaba" encryption looked like severely distorted TTY to any standard, non-crypto TTY terminal, totally unreadable. The Far East Command Hq (Pershing Heights, Tokyo, Japan) had their crypto room in the sub-sub- basement of the main Hq building, the former Japanese War Ministry Hq. The post-WW2 improved "Sigaba" (known by various other names) was used by US Army Field Radio units in "Angry-26" huts during the Korean War. A few M-209 Code Coverters (WW2 non-electric devices in small cases of the portable typewriter kind) were used in the field in Korea for small-radio encryption but that ceased by the time of the active phase beginning in Vietnam. By interviews and other correspondence, the U.S. Army maintained morsemanship as a requisite for Field Radio MOSs ("NEC" to swabbies?) up to about 1972. USA had several different communications MOSs then, especially in TTY over various systems and including the first of the military satellite communications links. However, tactical use of morse code in the Army was essentially nil at that time. Encrypted voice in the field was first tried operationally during the Vietnam War over the PRC-25s and PRC-77s through peripheral boxes. Such is now easily selectable by front panel controls on the SINCGARS manpack and vehicular sets (COMSEC is built-in to nearly every radio now, including military HTs). During the First Gulf War, Special Forces had slightly old "threes" having 1200 BPS "chiclet" keyboards and LCD text display working on the military aviation band of 225-400 MHz. The mil av band was also relayed by mil satellites as well as "Joint Stars" relay aircraft. Moderate crypto system built-in on the "threes." There was no movie-style "behind enemy lines" use of morse in the 1990-1991 period...or afterwards. |
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