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| subject: | Re: CW Was: E-mail |
Roy...
RW{at}> What do I know...I quit using morse the day I got my General (c1978)
RW{at}> and havn't looked back since. In fact, I joined with W5YI to help stop
RW{at}> the morse code requirements for licensing. Just foolin' around with
RW{at}> marc...
I've had several other hams tell me that the only reason they learned
CW was to pass a certain license element, then they never touched a keyer
again.
Now, that CW is no longer required, people are learning Morse Code
because they WANT TO, not because they HAVE TO. IIRC, just after the CW
requirement was removed, the phones at Vibroplex were ringing off the
wall, for people wanting keyers. A fellow local ham has one of their
"classic keyers", and he loves doing CW.
I understand that one station in the northeast US, N2SEX, is one of
the best CW operators you'll ever work...funky callsign not withstanding
(hi hi).
A former ham (now a SK) told me his secret to learning CW was to "learn
all the dirty words first". I laughed, and admitted "Well, you can't say
it on the air, but if it helps, more power to you".
That was verified when I was listening into a Morse Code class done by
the Dallas Amateur Radio Club on Echolink via the W5FC-R repeater. The
first 4 letters they taught formed an expletive...to which I thought "I'll
be damned" (hi hi). But, when you looked at the dot and dash pattern, it
made perfect sense. I've heard of hams sitting around the restaurant table,
telling dirty jokes in CW (hi hi).
FWIW, I tried a 5 wpm CW test once, but failed. Had I filled in the
blanks, I probably would've passed it, but it's a moot point now.
Daryl, WX1DER
... Ham Radio Messages/Replies Will Be Sent In Morse Code.
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