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Subject:
From:
Phil Scovell <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
For blind ham radio operators <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 10 Jun 2013 14:12:31 -0600
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (201 lines)
David,

You already got my reply off line that it was indeed Doug but I forgot to 
comment on your contesting scores.  Not bad numbers at all and 5 in one 
minute is the ticket for getting into the top 25 at least; if not higher, 
worldwide.

Phil.
K0NX




----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David W Wood" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Monday, June 10, 2013 1:55 PM
Subject: Re: High speed CW


> Hi Phil
>
> I wonder if one of those guys was Doug VE7NH.
> A strange guy, but amazing at CW.
> he stayed with me here in G on one occasion, and I visited him on Pender
> Island (off the east coast of Vancouver Island) while I left wife and
> daughter in Victoria to shop!!!!
>
> Most of those guys were professional CW operators from WW II and highly
> trained!
> Presumably you, and certainly me, are amateurs.
> When running GB75FOC recently my max rate was 220 per hour in contest 
> mode,
> and 5 in one single minute.
>
> Here's off for an omelets for supper!
>
> 73
>
> David W Wood
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: For blind ham radio operators [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> On Behalf Of Phil Scovell
> Sent: Monday, June 10, 2013 7:41 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: High speed CW
>
> Howard,
>
> You may be right; I just don't remember.  I got my General in November of 
> 66
>
> and after a few weeks of learning how to operate the Drake TR4 my mom 
> bought
>
> me for a Christmas present, and because I had passed my general, I joined
> every CW net on 80 meters I could find.  I soon learned, after the fun of
> sideband wore off, that CW was still my all time favorite mode.  I could
> already copy 10 WPM when I took my 5 WPM novice test because I listened to
> nothing but CW on my old BC348 receiver that was my novice RX.  Then when 
> I
> took the 13 WPM general, I was copying 20 WPM as a novice.  When I took 
> the
> Extra class at 20 WPM, I could copy, and rag chew, at 40 WPM.  In 1980 I
> bought my first CW keyboard and never went back.  I join the CFO, Chicken
> Fat Operators, group on 40 and 20 and some days worked as many as a dozen
> high speed operators all in a single round table.  We all worked QSK, 
> break
> in CW, so it was like working vox on sideband contacts.  I got so 60 WPM 
> was
>
> my rag chew speed and on good days, I could run at 70.  The guys I worked, 
> a
>
> few of them, could copy 80 to 90 WPM.  I proved it one day, not really
> believing what I was hearing, by putting Sandy, my wife, on the Curtis
> keyboard and setting it to 80 WPM.  These guys, W1OBJ, W6Wu, VE7NH, and
> several others were on frequency.  I told them Sandy would type and ask 
> them
>
> questions.  They kept answering her at 80 WPM and I finally told them to
> slow down to at least 50 so I could copy their replies and questions to 
> her.
>
> They all rang chewed at 80 and some, as I said, could do 90.  All the ones
> there that day, had men preset the Curtis keyboard to 95.  Sometimes they
> got it and sometimes they didn't.  W6PY was reported to be verified at 
> 100.
> Sandy could type 120 WPM on the straight due to her job.  I practice every
> day using the Morris Runner contest practice software and I start at 40 
> WPM
> and play contest for several minutes.  I do it for brain stimulation.  I
> make at least 33 contacts in the pile ups each day and sometime run it up
> all the way for 30 minutes.  I'm about two WPM below 200 contacts per hour
> on good days and about 180 per hour on any given day.  I find it as fun as
> actually being on the air sometimes.  The CFO members, my number was 168,
> had to copy at least 30 to 40 to keep up with the group but we all ended 
> our
>
> contacts with the chick cluck CW notes which saided like, dit dit dit dit
> dit daw or a long dash at the end sounding like a prolonged letter A.  At 
> 50
>
> to 80 WPM, it immediately reminds you of a chicken clucking.  I can't do 
> 50
> WPM any more without really focusing and I get tired of trying to copy it 
> so
>
> don't practice that as much.  I sit and copies some 40 meter guys who run 
> at
>
> 60 WPM just for practice but I get more letters, and an occasional word, 
> at
> that speed.  All these guys I'm referring to were over 60 years of age so
> what am I doing at 61, haha.  All I know is, even at 5 and 10 WPM, I still
> like CW the most.  However, in 1981, when the bands were hot, I worked 295
> countries in that year alone and almost all were on sideband on 20 meters
> with my 4 element yagi at just 40 feet and running 700 watts output.  I
> still worked a load of CW and probably worked well over 200 countries on 
> CW
> alone that year.  I have 316 countries now but I don't go after new DX 
> much
> these days.  I still like working DX but mostly on CW.  If anybody thinks 
> CW
>
> is a lost art, tune around in the DX CW contest.  You will find guys still
> running 50 WPM and working guys one right after another.  They take up the
> first 75 KHz on each CW band; wall to wall CW signals.
>
> Phil.
> K0NX
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Howard Kaufman" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Monday, June 10, 2013 11:47 AM
> Subject: Re: Old Rag Chewers Certificate
>
>
>>I am not sure, but I think you got it by having a qso at 30 WPM or more.
>> I had it to.  November of 1967 was a long time ago.
>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>> From: "Phil Scovell" <[log in to unmask]>
>> To: <[log in to unmask]>
>> Sent: Monday, June 10, 2013 12:12 PM
>> Subject: Re: Old Rag Chewers Certificate
>>
>>
>>> Gerry,
>>>
>>> I sure wish I would have kept my Braille novice log book and a couple of
>>> those old certificates.  I had the brass pounders certificate, too, but 
>>> I
>>> can't remember how you obtained that one.
>>>
>>> Phil.
>>> K0NX
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>>> From: "Gerry Learry" <[log in to unmask]>
>>> To: <[log in to unmask]>
>>> Sent: Monday, June 10, 2013 4:13 AM
>>> Subject: Re: Old Rag Chewers Certificate
>>>
>>>
>>>>I also got the real rag chewers certificate.
>>>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>>>> From: "Phil Scovell" <[log in to unmask]>
>>>> To: <[log in to unmask]>
>>>> Sent: Thursday, May 30, 2013 7:47 PM
>>>> Subject: Old Rag Chewers Certificate
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> There use to be a ham thing called the Rag Chewers Club.  You got a =
>>>>> certificate by talking to one ham for 30 minutes; phone or cw, it
>>>>> didn't
>>>>> =
>>>>> matter.  Then there was the 6 hour QSO which you could only talk to 
>>>>> one
>>>>> =
>>>>> person for 6 straight hours and there was another=20
>>>>> certificate for that.  A blind friend of mine that got his license
>>>>> three
>>>>> =
>>>>> months before I did, and I, did both.  So, there is lots to talk about
>>>>> =
>>>>> on the ham bands.
>>>>>
>>>>> Phil.
>>>>> K0NX
>>>>
>>
> 

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