[QCWA] McElroy
Bob Peters
rwpeters at swbell.net
Sun Sep 18 22:28:45 EDT 2005
I have been following this discussion and would like to tell you
>From the teachers mouth that typing speed is measured in 5 letter groups
Including spaces...You count the letters and spaces and divide by 5 and
the test is a 5 minute test...My xyl was a typing teacher and still
types perfect at 110 WPM...
Bob W1pe
-----Original Message-----
From: qcwa-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:qcwa-bounces at mailman.qth.net]
On Behalf Of Jeffrey D Angus
Sent: Sunday, September 18, 2005 9:13 PM
To: Discussion of QCWA
Subject: Re: [QCWA] McElroy
Bob West wrote:
> I'm not sure WHO counts code speed that way.
>
> For the purpose of Amateur VE exams we count 5 characters as
> one word. The letters count as one, the digits, punctuation,
> and prosigns count as 2. Nothing about spaces.
By the way, THE correct way to measure code speed is as follows.
Shamelessly stolen from http://www.ac6v.com/morseaids.htm but at
least I did give credit and a link.
What I found interesting, was I was right in my original thoughts on
this.
But I found this site to verify my suspicions.
Jeff
wa6fwi
Character Spacing and Calculating Morse Code Speed
The word PARIS is the standard to determine CW code speed. Each dit is
one element, each dah is three elements, intra-character spacing is one
element, inter-character spacing is three elements and inter-word
spacing is
seven elements. The word PARIS is exactly 50 elements. Note that after
each
dit/dah of the letter P -- one element spacing is used except the last
one.
(Intra-Character). After the last dit of P is sent, 3 elements are added
(Inter-
Character). After the word PARIS - 7 elements are used. Thus:
P
di da da di
1 1 3 1 3 1 1 (3) = 14 elements
A
di da
1 1 3 (3) = 8 elements
R
di da di
1 1 3 1 1 (3) = 10 elements
I
di di
1 1 1 (3) = 6 elements
S
di di di
1 1 1 1 1 [7] = 12 elements
Total = 50 elements
() = intercharacter
[] = interword
If you send PARIS 5 times in a minute (5WPM) you have sent 250 elements
(using correct spacing). 250 elements into 60 seconds per minute = 240
milli-
seconds per element.
13 words-per-minute is one element every 92.31 milliseconds.
--
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin
"A life lived in fear is a life half lived."
Tara Morice as Fran, from the movie "Strictly Ballroom"
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