[Elecraft] Elecraft: My CW Progress
[email protected]
[email protected]
Thu Aug 21 09:21:00 2003
Hi Guys, sorry if this is a little off freq but here is an update on my CW
progress (using my K1 of course) and a request for a bit of advice.
I've been on the air for only 2 months now almost exclusively on 40m in the
evenings. I've made about 50 or 60 short QSO's, my CW motivation is high
and I am making progress with CW. However here are some opportunities for
you OT's to offer some advise to a novice (in ham radio not in age
unfortunately, I'm 47!).
I can send on my Kent straight key at about 12-15 wpm with a nice rhythm
with or without longer than normal gaps. I prefer to send without the
longer gaps since it feels right sounds nicer and is easier for the
proficient hams to copy. BUT I can't copy as well when the other ham
sends to me without the gaps. So do I please the other guy and send
without the gaps or do I give him the jerky CW so that I can get it all
when he sends back jerky. "To gap or not to gap" so to speak!
I find that though I start sending with gaps, I unconsciously start to
shorten the gaps to normal spacing because it feels more natural and
preserves the natural rhythms of the shorter words like FER and RST and
QSO etc etc. I guess I am copying the sounds from other hams who are
sending without gaps.
SRI this is a bit tedious and off track but I don't know which is the
best way to proceed. I don't want to slow down my character speed as
this also loses the rhythm.
I have got tired of trying to get everything down on paper. I can't
write very fast using block capitals and I seem to get all tensed up
when trying to paper copy it all, so I've started to head copy (apart
from the stuff for the log). I don't get all of it but it is getting
better and I can sit back and relax and concentrate on seeing the
letters on the imaginary blackboard. Am I going the right way or should
I stick to the pencil.
Sometimes when I am sending, my arm goes stiff and the dits are the
result of an arm shake rather than a wrist action. So I have stopped
sending with the arm in free space and put my arm on the table under a
book and the key at right angles to the norm. This way the arm is
supported and stops shaking and I use just my fingers/wrist to key. I
seems to be a lot less tiring. Any thoughts?
Martin
M0KWV
K1 #1534
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http://www.simoncarves.com
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