[MRCG] TG-34 on TV
Darryl Crain via MRCG
mrcg at mailman.qth.net
Fri Jul 11 11:49:20 EDT 2014
So Jerry, does that imply that they had "receive guys" and "transmit guys" for their radio operations. Or were the receive guys, as you mention, used as intercepts only.
The Army had those, but they copied with the letter to type mode. I know that because the ones coming back from Asia in the late 50's could copy in their head and tell you what was being received.
With my attempts to type from code a while back I noticed that if I thought about what letter it was at the higher speeds (25+) I would loose it.
DC
-----Original Message-----
From: Jerry Foster, AG6ER <jmfoster711 at sbcglobal.net>
To: Marc Goldman <marcwb6dce at sbcglobal.net>; Tom Minnis WB6HYD <Tom_minnis at att.net>; John Morrice K6MI <k6mi at pacbell.net>; John Castorina WB6AZP <boatanchor at martasystems.com>; Tim Samm N6CC <timsamm at gmail.com>; Military Radio Collectors Group <mrcg at mailman.qth.net>; Darryl Crain <flyguy12D at aim.com>; Derek Lyon AI6F <lyon at ai6f.com>; Steve Carmean KB8AVJ <naemrac at gmail.com>; Maritime Radio Historical Society <info at radiomarine.org>; Jim Tripp WA6DIJ <wa6dij at razzolink.com>
Sent: Fri, Jul 11, 2014 8:13 am
Subject: Re: TG-34 on TV
The Navy, back in the days when it used Morse, taught the Radiomen to take code directly into a typewriter. They learned to associate the sound of a letter with a keystroke. Interestingly, they did not learn to read Morse into letters (either with a pencil or in their head) or to type (learn to associate a letter with a keystroke). And the standard speed the Navy used was 45 wpm!
On 07/10/2014 11:20 PM, Marc Goldman wrote:
Ha Ha Ha Ha Har De Har De Har...
Gentleman:
On the TV show Pawn Stars this evening.... This guy brings in a TG-34 and says its a rare code reading machine !! no tapes... well the pawn shop guy calls in this consultant guy. (I have seen him before on the program) and he brings a brand new paper tape in the box.. no reel.. he had it in his garage.. so the bad new is it does not decode Morse code.. it is a classroom training aid !! i think there are a lot of them around.. there is one in a display case in a mini museum at Hollister Airport.. just saw it a few weeks back .. so not worth the $2000 he was originally asking.. the amusing part is he still gets $200 for it at the pawn shop!! i think if this showed up at Foothill Swap meet ya might get $25 for it !! way way overpriced.. if you had a bunch of tapes it could still be used for Morse code training... but who is using Morse code these days... the subset of Ham Radio Operators that are DXers on HF.... and identifiers for repeaters and the MRHS folks... All this box does is send Morse code... most likely random letters and numbers and maybe punctuation marks... and the student writes it down with a pencil and paper.. and eventually a typewriter...
i believe in the very early days of Morse code a machine was invented to copy it... and than it was discovered that the operator would learn the code by listening to the sounder clicks... and not need the invention. much to the consternation of its inventor !! i am pretty sure this was telegraph days.. before radio.. very likely American Morse
73
Marc Goldman
WB6DCE
Seaside,CA
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