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THE AM BULLETIN BOARD => QSO => Topic started by: W1UK on May 14, 2005, 09:30:53 AM



Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: W1UK on May 14, 2005, 09:30:53 AM
Couple of our guys beat out some X'ers using good old CW versus cell phone text messaging:

http://www.kkn.net/~n6tv/


Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: WD8BIL on May 14, 2005, 02:22:30 PM
The CW guys beat the tar outta the text message guys !!!!

The message:

I just saved a bundle on my car insurance.


Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: Jack-KA3ZLR- on May 14, 2005, 02:24:30 PM
It was Excellent... :D


Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: W4LTM on May 14, 2005, 04:04:51 PM
That was great!

Got to get me one of those green visors though.


Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: VE3BEE on May 14, 2005, 04:13:50 PM
Sure was neat, but they should have had a couple of 60wpm ops, would have cut the time in half...


Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: k4kyv on May 14, 2005, 05:58:51 PM
The attire was supposed to recall the landline telegraphers of years gone by.  One small inconsistency, though.  The guys who wore the green visors and garters on their sleeves to work communicated in American Morse, using the old click-clack sounders, not International Morse used for the demonstration.

Perhaps it would have been more authentic to have conjured up an image of the Titanic's radio room rather than an old fashioned telegraph office.

This act was billed as a demonstration of Morse Code vs. text messaging, not necessarily having anything to do with amateur radio.  However, they gave some good publicity for amateur radio by letting the audience know how and why they acquired their proficiency in cw.  Pretty good for what you can normally expect over commercial TV.

Jay Leno's show is one of the few that I find palatable enough to watch and actually enjoy from time to time.


Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: Pete, WA2CWA on May 15, 2005, 02:51:46 AM
Quote
This act was billed as a demonstration of Morse Code vs. text messaging, not necessarily having anything to do with amateur radio. However, they gave some good publicity for amateur radio by letting the audience know how and why they acquired their proficiency in cw. Pretty good for what you can normally expect over commercial TV.


And the plug came from a person who the manager of Yaesu's Engineering/ R&D Dept. Amateur Division.

(http://www.aralb.org/Heil/Chip_K7JA_mod.jpg)

Here's a bio; go down about a quarter of the page: http://www.hamcon.org/Breakfast.htm

Here's a crew on the Queen Mary:
(http://www.aralb.org/Heil/Janet_Chip_Bob_mod.jpg)


Title: Hams on the Tonight Show
Post by: k4kyv on May 15, 2005, 12:10:43 PM
Quote

And the plug came from a person who the manager of Yaesu's Engineering/ R&D Dept. Amateur Division.


I wasn't sure if Chip was still with Yaesu.  I used to run into him at Dayton back in the early 80's and we communicated often by phone, when I ran the service dep't of a commercial two-way radio firm that also did warranty work for Yaesu.  I wouldn't have recognised him on the TV show, but, alas,  that was over 20 years ago.

Speaking of CW and Yaesu, those who are members of Topband Reflector are aware of the issues cw ops have been having with Yaesu regarding transmitted key clicks from some of their newest top of the line transceivers.  Information on how to fix the problem can be found on the W8JI website.  It would cost Yaesu at most only a few dollars per rig to install the mods in the production line.
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