[CW] "The Ham Whisperer" Morse Code Course

D.J.J. Ring, Jr. n1ea at arrl.net
Thu Nov 18 11:21:57 EST 2021


I agree with that method. I had at one time arranged the numbers, letters
and punctuation in an arrangement which required the learner to wait until
the entire character was sent. In some methods of instruction there were
shortcuts to getting the character recognized correctly, like if no letters
or numbers were introduced with dashes except the letter O, the learners
(students) wrote down O as soon as the first dash was sent.

I did a lot of work on this, but I lost my system of character introduction
during a house move.

73

David N1EA

On Thu, Nov 18, 2021, 11:13 Bill KA8VIT <ka8vit at ka8vit.com> wrote:

> When we were taught we were taught the longer characters first.
>
> This conditioned us to not "count the dits and dahs" but to wait until all
> of the character was sent before "recognizing" it
>
> 73 - Bill KA8VIT
>
>
> > On 11/17/2021 4:13 PM David J. J. Ring, Jr. <n1ea at arrl.net> wrote:
> >
> >
> > Andy, KE4GKP has put together a nice Morse code course on his "The Ham
> Whisperer" web site.
> >
> > http://www.hamwhisperer.com/p/morse-code-course.html
> >
> > He also has license theory practice courses - expired sylabi - but
> nevertheless still quite useful.
> >
> > 73
> > DR
> >
>
> ====================================
> Bill Chaikin, KA8VIT
> Chief Radio Operator
> WW2 Submarine USS COD SS-224 (NECO)
> USS COD Amateur Radio Club - W8COD
>
> ka8vit at ka8vit.com
> http://ka8vit.com
> http://www.usscod.org
> ====================================
>
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