[QCWA] Continental morse vs international
Joseph Fenn
jfenn at lava.net
Mon Aug 29 21:41:10 EDT 2005
John Paul... I had'nt run accross that one at least I dont remember
it. Of course the hams have often used dit dit da-di-da which
of course again is substituting the morse dit (space dit
(morse for O) instad of just saying okay or ok. An old RR
Telegrapher filled me in on most of this.
Joe
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On Mon, 29 Aug 2005, John Paul Keon wrote:
> Joe:
> If I am reading this correctly, di di da di da was also used
> on military ciruits with a q signal to ask a question.
> It was INT and the q signal. Could this have any relevance?
>
>
> John Paul, Raleigh, NC// AB4PP
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Joseph Fenn" <jfenn at lava.net>
> To: <qcwa at mailman.qth.net>
> Sent: Monday, August 29, 2005 4:44 PM
> Subject: [QCWA] Continental morse vs international
>
>
> I know I have asked this question many times before but still have not
> found an answer yet. I went to "FISTS" and other sources but still
> came up with nada. During my 40 years of cw with old CAA,Panam,
> ARINC, etc of CW work I did find there were certain carryovers from
> Continental morse (and RR telegraphy) certain letters which were
> used commonly in Airline cW work as well as to the ham band cw useage.
> "w o" was sent as di dah dah dit dit. Which was question meaining
> "who is the opr at the other end of the circuit. Also another
> "dit dit dah di dah" meaning "OK". Frequently still encountered
> even today. Both stemmed from continental morse (also RR teletraphy)
> and the "dit dit" with space is the letter "o" in old morse.
> The one translation I could never find the relationship for was
> "rj" (meaning wait while I change to my relief opr). How in the
> heck can that be read backward in RR or old Morse telegraphy to give
> that meaning. I even tried "rlf" but found no relationship to
> RR or continental morse. Any clues from anyone would be appreciated.
> (dit dit) with spaceing is of course the letter "o" in morse
> and RR telegraphy hence Dit Dit Dah di dah means OK and
> is still used often particularly from the aussies and new zealanders.
> So how would the code be in continental morse for
> "standby my relief opr is here".
> Joe
>
>
> **********************************************************
> * Ham KH6JF AARS/MARS ABM6JF QCWA WW2 VET WD RADIO SYSTEM*
> * Army MARS PRECEDED by AARS (Army Amateur Radio System) *
> * Hi State ARMY MARS COORDINATOR *
> **********************************************************
>
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