Robert,

What is missing is that each person learns at a different level and pace. Each of us has our brains "wired differently". In other words, what will work well for one person does not mean that it will work well for all. The quickest way to increasing CW speed is to get on the air and start copying stations that stretch your current copying speed. In other words, push yourself to higher speeds even if you cannot copy everything. ARRL Code Practice is good up to 35 WPM, so try that, but on the air conversations may drop you back to 25 WPM because of CW being sent imperfectly. When you can copy imperfect code (from a bug or keyer without perfect spacing), then you have 'arrived'.

There is no substitute for practice - I advocate the 10 minutes a day at trying to copy above your comfortable speed limit. More time than that leads to frustration.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 12/7/2015 8:27 PM, Robert G Strickland wrote:
Bob's approach to increasing speed once a basic level of cw proficiency has been achieved speak directly to my original thoughts on the subject. Using a 5-letter group of random letters as the practice message, then my question, in terms of Bob's approach, could be stated as follows. Which is the quickest way to achieve some target speed: to start the group at a speed where only one/two character are correct, or to start where three/four are correct? I have no doubt that with the regular and intense "concentration" that Bob advocates, any method [within common sense limits] will result in higher copying speed. That said, which starting point is going to get the operator to the target speed the quickest? I don't know. Most of the folks who can comfortably copy at speeds in excess of 30wpm seem to be from the "old school" in that many learned in the military and have been at it a very long time. I have to believe that their speed developed over time with continuous usage/practice. Nothing beats time in the saddle. An interesting "experiment" would be to take a bunch of hams who can copy at 20wpm, divide them into the two approaches being discussed and "measure" how long it takes each group to be comfortable at 30/35wpm. A human factors issue is a person's task motivation and tolerance for frustration. Starting with only one character correct out of five may be pretty daunting for some and a piece of cake for others. But, that's a separate issue.

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