[QCWA] Continental morse vs international
Norm Gertz
k1aa at cfl.rr.com
Tue Aug 30 08:40:29 EDT 2005
The signal "int" preceding a transmission meant "interrogatory"....was used
by Navy/Marine Corps..
73 Norm K1AA
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Paul Keon" <jpkeon at nc.rr.com>
To: "Discussion of QCWA" <qcwa at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Monday, August 29, 2005 8:10 PM
Subject: Re: [QCWA] Continental morse vs international
> 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
>
>
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