[Elecraft] High End Paddles

David A. Belsley belsley at bc.edu
Fri Jun 16 20:36:41 EDT 2006


There are actually a number of cases for longer dashes.  With a bug  
or SK, for example, one can truly emphasize the "yes" by sending R  
with a long dash in the center (di-daahhh-dit).  I miss that kind of  
personalizing of code.  One can also send, rather than the mundane  
dah-di-di-di-dah, something like dah  -  di  -  di  -   di   -    
daahhh, with ease while you're trying to figure what you're going to  
say next.  That element of code has been greatly removed with the  
keyer.  But the irrepressible element of the human soul does come  
forth through other subtle elements with a keyer.  I used a bug for  
over 40 years, and now, after long getting used to a keyer, I'd never  
go back -- and I'm sure the chap on the other end feels the same  
way.  The idiosyncratic element to sending with a bug, which almost  
all bug users have to some extent, particularly the "bug lilt", can  
make for code that is very difficult to copy.

And, by the way, for those who love their Bencher BY's and took  
umbrage at my disparaging comments in my earlier posts, I will  
express no sorrow at all, but wish them the very best.  I envy them  
the latitude they have for growth -- if they'll only take it.  The  
Bencher BY is kind of like the PC of the paddle world.  It must be  
good because everyone has it, but, in fact, almost everything else is  
better.

best wishes,

dave belsley, w1euy



On Jun 16, 2006, at 6:15 PM, Fred Jensen wrote:

> Well, actually there is one case.  Zero is a long dash which I  
> can't send with my K1EL keyer or my K2.
>
> <www.chss.montclair.edu/~pererat/percode.htm>
>
> As a teen in the mid-50's, my friends and I learned American Morse  
> just so we could get on 80m at night with each other and confuse  
> others on the band.
>
> Calling either the landline code or the Continental code "Morse" is  
> one of the better examples of "Life isn't fair."  Sam F. B. Morse's  
> idea was to have a series of numbered messages and parts of  
> messages in a dictionary, from which you constructed what you  
> wished to send and then sent the numbers, and he spent the vast  
> majority of his time compiling that dictionary.  Sam was fairly  
> full of himself, and when he didn't get enough attention, he would  
> fall ill, often in someone else's bed.
>
> His assistant, Alfred Vail, realized that the clicking and clacking  
> of the paper tape inker could be used to decode the code and came  
> up with the alphabet. So, if life were fair, it would have been the  
> Vail code. Old Sam didn't really "invent" the telegraph either, but  
> that's another story.
>
> Fred K6DGW
> Auburn CA CM98lw
>
> Joe-aa4nn wrote:
>> Varying lengths of dashes?
>> I surely don't remember that
>> when I practiced American Morse
>> circa 1952.
>> de Joe, aa4nn
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------
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-------------------------------------
david a. belsley
professor of economics



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