An Essay on
Operating CW by N6KR
I find that CW has many practical and engaging
aspects that I just dont get with computer-mediated modes
like FT8. Youd think Id be burned out on CW by now,
over 45 years since I was first licensed, but no, Im still
doin it :)
Yes, FT8 (etc.) is a no-brainer when, despite poor conditions,
your goal is to log as many contacts as possible with as many
states or countries as possible. Its so streamlined and
efficient that the whole process is readily automated. (If you
havent read enough opinions on that, see "The mother
of all FT8 threads on QRZ.com, for example.)
But back to CW. Heres why it works for me. YMMV.
CW feels personal and visceral, like driving a sports car rather
than taking a cab. As with a sports car, there are risks. You can
get clobbered by larger vehicles (QRM). Witness road range (UP
2!). Fall into a pothole (QSB). Be forced to drive through
rain or snow (QRN).
With CW, like other forms of human conversation, you can affect
your own style. Make mistakes. Joke about it.
CW is a skill that bonds operators together across generations
and nations. A language, more like pidgin than anything else,
with abbreviations and historical constructs and imperialist
oddities. A curious club anyone can joIn. (At age 60 and able to
copy 50 WPM on a good day, I may qualify as a Nerd Mason of some
modest order, worthless in any other domain but of value in a
contest.)
With very simple equipment that anyone can build, such as a
high-power single-transistor oscillator, you can transmit a CW
signal. I had very little experience with electronics when I was
14 and built an oscillator that put out maybe 100 mW. Just
twisted the leads of all those parts together and keyed the
collector supply--a 9-volt battery. With this simple circuit on
my desk, coupled to one guy wire of our TV antenna mast, I worked
a station 150 miles away and was instantly hooked on building
things. And on QRP. Im sure the signal was key-clicky and
had lots of harmonics. Ive spent a lifetime making such
things work better, but this is where it started.
Going even further down the techno food chain, you can send
CW by whistling, flashing a lamp, tapping on someones leg
under a table in civics class, or pounding a wrench on the
inverted hull of an upside-down U.S. war vessel, as happened at
Pearl Harbor. Last Saturday at an engineering club my son belongs
to, a 9-year-old demonstrated an Arduino Uno flashing HELLO WORLD
in Morse on an LED. The other kids were impressed, including my
son, who promptly wrote a version that sends three independent
Morse streams on three LEDs. A mini-pileup. His first program.
Finally, to do CW you dont always need a computer,
keyboard, mouse, monitor, or software. Such things are invaluable
in our daily lives, but for me, shutting down everything but the
radio is the high point of my day. The small display glows like a
mystic portal into my personal oyster, the RF spectrum. Unless I
crank up the power, theres no fan noise. Tuning the knob
slowly from the bottom end of the band segment to the top is a
bit like fishing my favorite stream, Taylor Creek, which connects
Fallen Leaf Lake to Lake Tahoe. Drag the line across the green,
sunlit pool. See what hits. Big trout? DX. Small trout? Hey, its
still a fish, and a QSO across town is still a QSO. Admire it,
then throw it back in.
(BTW: You now know why the Elecraft K3, K3S, KX2, and KX3 all
have built-in RTTY and PSK data modes that allow transmit via the
keyer paddle and receive on the rigs display. We decided to
make these data modes conversational...like CW.)
Back to 40 meters....
73,
Wayne N6KR
Courtesy of W6YA, 9V1YC, N6KR
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