Yes agreed, but I guess they can't decode for the same reason.
I use an MFJ Morse decoder to tell me if I'm sending crap - it's not
good and badly sent Morse, but since I want to know if I'm seeing good
code, it's ok
--
Ideas are like rabbits. You get a couple and learn how to handle them,
and
pretty soon you have a dozen.
--John Steinbeck, novelist, Nobel laureate (1902-1968)
On 20 Oct 2008, at 13:39, Julian, G4ILO wrote:
David Ferrington, M0XDF wrote:
No, but it makes sense that the K3 knows whether you closed the dot
or
dash paddle and therefore probably stores this as a digit, perhaps 1
for dit and 2 for dah, zeo for space?
Ok Wayne/Eric/Lyle - I want to know now - how do you store the Morse
in the memories?
I wasn't too bothered about being unable to program the memories
with a
straight key, although that would make it possible to use a computer
keyer
to program them, which somebody might find useful. No, I just
thought having
the TX Decode available for straight keys would be a nice aid to
improving
one's sending.
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