I noticed that musically inclined folks seem to learn morse quicker.
I wonder why that is ?
BTW I hope we havent been on this non elecraft topic too long on the forum !
73,
Bob
K6UJ
On 12/7/15 8:44 PM, Kevin Stover wrote:
Absolutely there are differences in how peoples brains are wired.
My brother got his license 15 years ago.
He was a music major and is a band director, all of the rigs in his
shack have the side tone set to 440 Hz, A above middle C. It's been a
musical tuning standard for ages. Once he got the tone of the cw being
received and sent set to a standard he knows quite well his CW
abilities just exploded. He moved past me like white lightning in his
copy ability. He's doing 40 wpm without breaking a sweat, is net
control for the Iowa 80m CW net and mastered the Vibroplex bug inside
of a month.
I'm coming up on my 25th year licensed.
I'm an IT guy, network engineer.
I've always been math/logic and mechanically inclined.
I can sub-net IPV4 networks in my head.
I struggled learning code. I bought both the ARRL and 73 magazine tapes.
My first try on a morse exam was a flaming failure. 5 wpm test set up
in a huge auditorium at the local hospital.
We all sat at the front listening to a boom box...and the echo off the
back wall 60' away. I locked up.
I did finally learn enough to pass the 13wpm test and later the 20 but
it took a lot of work.
I found the Koch method and the G4FON software 10 years ago. I can now
do 30 wpm comfortably, 40 in a contest.
The Vibroplex bug my wife bought me still taunts and insults me. I'm
much more comfortable with the single lever paddle I have and my
Winkey USB.
On 12/7/2015 8:12 PM, Robert G Strickland wrote:
Don...
For sure, individual differences make for a big difference, both in
the rate of learning and the appropriateness of any one approach. I
think we all agree that "stretching your current copying speed" is
the only way to get faster. That's certainly my experience. I think
my curiosity comes down to how much "stretch" is the sweet spot
[individual difference aside]. Lots of stretch - few characters/words
copied, versus some stretch - most characters/words copied.
Speaking of individual factors... I was just practicing with Rufz and
noticed how long I "hang" on the first character which inevitably
leads to subsequent errors. So, I pushed myself to almost "ignore"
the first character and move right along. Overall error rate dropped
significantly. So, yes, lots going on. Nothing beats practicing, for
sure. Have a good day.
...robert
______________________________________________________________
Elecraft mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
Message delivered to arch...@mail-archive.com