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![]() an old freind trashed the English language yet again: Michael A. Terrell wrote: Al Klein wrote: What about the people locked out by CW requirements who wanted to design and test RF equipment? Not the "I don't do solder" types, but people with a real love of electronic design? I've always had a severe dropout in my hearing that made it impossible to listen to CW for more than a few minutes at a time. I would end up with headaches, some that lasted for days. I finally threw in the towel and went into other areas of electronics. I wanted to learn microwave communications. Along the way I worked in Broadcast and Two way radio servicing. i hear you on the headaches I remmebr them from my teen aged efforts at Morse "efforts"...?!?! "efforts" suggests that you did something that actually required, well, EFFORT! We all know that was wasted bandwidth! amusing I listen I can lsiten to morse all day without a problem as long I don't try to break it down at all then a headache sets in a in matter of seconds and slowly grows as I try to process the signal The PROBLEM, Morkie, is that the guys sending the Morse are doing it in ENGLISH, and you're trying to "hear" it in Morkiese. The two don't exchange well. I can in fat qso in the mode using pc with a spectrographic display to allow me to look at the parts of the signal I can't read with the pc What's a "fat qso", Mork..?!? And using a "...spectrographic display to allow (you) to look at the parts of the signal (you) can't read with the pc...?!?! More Morkie Mularkie. Steve, K4YZ |
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