Ben,
I also went directly from straight key to paddle "late in life" -- when I
started contesting in 1986 after already being licensed for 25 years. AND,
I intentionally learned to send left-handed (I'm right-handed) after
observing a fellow contester's shack setup that had everything but the AF
and RF gain operated by his right hand -- tuning knob, band change, RIT, amp
tuning, antenna switch, keyer paddle, paper logging...
Boy was I lousy for a while! I started by doing at least ten sessions of
10-15 minutes just sending text from QST and making a few QRS contacts, then
things began to get better. Today, I still stumble a lot if I don't get
enough practice -- If I don't operate much between contests, it helps a lot
to put in a couple practice sessions just before the next one.
Finally, once I learned to send left-handed, I was surprised to discover I
could also send right-handed (mirror-image), although not quite as well.
73, Gary
K9AY
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Subject: [SECC] Tips on getting used to iambic paddle?
> Well, I managed to leave my straight key at our club field day site. and
> the easiest (read laziest) way to get it back is to wait until the next
> club meeting in a little over a month (yeah, I'm still a straight key
> operator, even at moderate contest speeds (I believe I managed 25wpm or
> so on the straight key)). I've decided to try and use the time to force
> myself to get used to using paddles. I've gotten out my old Ham-Key
> paddles, and have enabled the iambic keyer in my Alinco. Any tips on
> getting to where I don't mess up every couple/3 words?
>
> Ben
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