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#21
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![]() "William" wrote The Farnsworth teaching method is not meant to be implemented as Morse Code, but you and all the rest of you OF's pretty much do as you please. "Everything not specifically prohibited is mandatory." dit dit 3, de Hans, K0HB |
#22
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![]() "B.P. Stupidname" wrote down Jason up CW... Do you remember "Oh ****, Jason is beeping, now gone steady tone, and I can't find a time tick!" 73, de Hans, K0HB |
#23
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![]() "B.P. Stupidname" wrote down Jason up CW... Do you remember "Oh ****, Jason is beeping, now gone steady tone, and I can't find a time tick!" 73, de Hans, K0HB |
#24
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![]() "B.P. Stupidname" wrote the stupidest thing I ever used was a British BID610... or some such I didn't know the Brits had those. We had a couple on loan from Canada at CINCLANT to crosspatch some Cutler circuits up to the Canucks. Big ugly monsters, the key method reminded me of Orestes. Tedious! dit dit Hans |
#25
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![]() "B.P. Stupidname" wrote the stupidest thing I ever used was a British BID610... or some such I didn't know the Brits had those. We had a couple on loan from Canada at CINCLANT to crosspatch some Cutler circuits up to the Canucks. Big ugly monsters, the key method reminded me of Orestes. Tedious! dit dit Hans |
#26
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Would you mind sending three copies to the Department of Redundancy
Department? Thanks, bb |
#27
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Would you mind sending three copies to the Department of Redundancy
Department? Thanks, bb |
#28
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OldSailor wrote:
The only thing lightning fast about CT(R)'s was how fast they could spill a mug of coffee or a Coke into a TTY or a piece of electronic equipment and yell "matman"! Actually the CT rating was more properly known as the crossed swab and buffer. Of course, we told RM's we talked to god and wrote down what he said! I wanted to be an RM, arriving in boot camp with a First Phone/Radar, General Class ham ticket and 3 years of Navy MARS experience. I was told my GCT/ARI was too high, so off to ET school which I challenged and finished in 5 weeks, then DS "A" and suddenly I was ranked with the 2 percent of ET/DS that could read and became a CT (M). 73 Doug K7ABX CTMCS (Retired) I, too, became a "lightning fast chicken plucker" CT(R) after a few years as a ham. We seldom spilled our coffee into gear, though we did beat the c**p out of our mills copying code at 35+ gpm. I think each of our operators had 3 of those old typewriters, 1 in use and 2 in the shop for the matmen to try to cobble back together. Fortunately our R390's were pretty indestructable. Back to the original topic here, we got so familiar with the "fist" of each of the operators of the stations we monitored, we could identify most stations without hearing callsigns. This was even more useful in telling us when and where units were being rotated. After a couple of years of copying code like that, I went back to civilian life and haven't made more than half a dozen cw qsos since. Wayne, KEØBZ (former CTR2 1966-73) |
#29
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OldSailor wrote:
The only thing lightning fast about CT(R)'s was how fast they could spill a mug of coffee or a Coke into a TTY or a piece of electronic equipment and yell "matman"! Actually the CT rating was more properly known as the crossed swab and buffer. Of course, we told RM's we talked to god and wrote down what he said! I wanted to be an RM, arriving in boot camp with a First Phone/Radar, General Class ham ticket and 3 years of Navy MARS experience. I was told my GCT/ARI was too high, so off to ET school which I challenged and finished in 5 weeks, then DS "A" and suddenly I was ranked with the 2 percent of ET/DS that could read and became a CT (M). 73 Doug K7ABX CTMCS (Retired) I, too, became a "lightning fast chicken plucker" CT(R) after a few years as a ham. We seldom spilled our coffee into gear, though we did beat the c**p out of our mills copying code at 35+ gpm. I think each of our operators had 3 of those old typewriters, 1 in use and 2 in the shop for the matmen to try to cobble back together. Fortunately our R390's were pretty indestructable. Back to the original topic here, we got so familiar with the "fist" of each of the operators of the stations we monitored, we could identify most stations without hearing callsigns. This was even more useful in telling us when and where units were being rotated. After a couple of years of copying code like that, I went back to civilian life and haven't made more than half a dozen cw qsos since. Wayne, KEØBZ (former CTR2 1966-73) |
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