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[TenTec] CW keying weight

To: <tentec@contesting.com>
Subject: [TenTec] CW keying weight
From: n4lq@iglou.com (Steve Ellington)
Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2002 17:23:21 -0500
Mark I think the bottom line is that you're going to have to make the weight
adjustable over the range of 'choppy as a chicken' to 'everything runs
together'. The only way to really tell what's coming from the transmitter is
to monitor it on another receiver. You can calibrate the control however you
chose. 1-10 is just fine.
Steve Ellington
N4LQ
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mark Erbaugh" <mark@microenh.com>
To: <tentec@contesting.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2002 8:07 AM
Subject: [TenTec] CW keying weight


> This is for the serious CW ops out there.
>
> I'm working on a rig control program for the Pegasus. The Pegasus lets you
> adjust the length of the dits, dahs and element spaces independently. I
have
> figured out the formula for calculating the timing of CW dits, dahs and
> spaces from WPM when using standard weighting (dah = 3 * dit = 3 * space).
> Is there an accepted standard on how to apply weighting? My assumption
would
> be that normal weight would be 100%, a weight of 80% would mean that dah =
3
> * dit * 0.80, a weight of 120% would mean dah = 3 * dit * 1.2. Is this
what
> people would expect of CW weight? What's an acceptable range of weight
> adjustment. Obviously an absolute minimum would be 33% when dahs would
have
> the same length as dits.
>
> When the weight is not 100%, how does one calculate the WPM? Is it based
on
> the length of the dit or the dah or perhaps based on the recalculated
length
> of some standard 'word' such as PARIS?
>
> When the weight is not 100%, is the length of the element space still the
> same as the length of a dit or is it 1/3 the length of the dah? Or is it
> something else, like the normal length of a dit at the adjusted WPM
> calculated above?
>
> Why do operators adjust the keyeing weight? Is it just for a
characteristic
> sound or does is improve the readability under certain conditions? If so,
> what adjustment is used under what conditions?
>
>
> Thanks and 73,
> Mark
>
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