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#1
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that person die?
David G. Nagel wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Dirk wrote: Ham's care more about operating appliances than knowing how to save a lives. How many times in the entire history of amateur radio has a ham used CW to actually save a life? One would think there would be a book full of examples by now. A ham operator intercepted the SOS from the RMS Titanic. how many life were saved thereby the Carpathia wheard the call and arrived to save some folks what role did the ARS playing in saving even one life that sorry day? |
#2
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that persondie?
an old friend wrote:
David G. Nagel wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Dirk wrote: Ham's care more about operating appliances than knowing how to save a lives. How many times in the entire history of amateur radio has a ham used CW to actually save a life? One would think there would be a book full of examples by now. A ham operator intercepted the SOS from the RMS Titanic. how many life were saved thereby the Carpathia wheard the call and arrived to save some folks what role did the ARS playing in saving even one life that sorry day? We aren't talking about failure to receive a CW SOS. Those ships that responded did so after receiving word of the sinking by radio. They saved many lives from the lifeboats which would otherwise have been lost to the cold. Dave N |
#3
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that person die?
uhhhh..... good point. Not sure what your point applies to... but OK, we all
agree that radio is a useful invention. What were we talking about again? rb "David G. Nagel" wrote in message ... an old friend wrote: David G. Nagel wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Dirk wrote: Ham's care more about operating appliances than knowing how to save a lives. How many times in the entire history of amateur radio has a ham used CW to actually save a life? One would think there would be a book full of examples by now. A ham operator intercepted the SOS from the RMS Titanic. how many life were saved thereby the Carpathia wheard the call and arrived to save some folks what role did the ARS playing in saving even one life that sorry day? We aren't talking about failure to receive a CW SOS. Those ships that responded did so after receiving word of the sinking by radio. They saved many lives from the lifeboats which would otherwise have been lost to the cold. Dave N |
#4
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that person die?
"Woody" wrote in message news:N6JGg.27193$uV.6302@trnddc08... uhhhh..... good point. Not sure what your point applies to... but OK, we all agree that radio is a useful invention. What were we talking about again? rb "David G. Nagel" wrote in message ... an old friend wrote: David G. Nagel wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Dirk wrote: Ham's care more about operating appliances than knowing how to save a lives. How many times in the entire history of amateur radio has a ham used CW to actually save a life? One would think there would be a book full of examples by now. A ham operator intercepted the SOS from the RMS Titanic. how many life were saved thereby the Carpathia wheard the call and arrived to save some folks what role did the ARS playing in saving even one life that sorry day? We aren't talking about failure to receive a CW SOS. Those ships that responded did so after receiving word of the sinking by radio. They saved many lives from the lifeboats which would otherwise have been lost to the cold. Dave N |
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