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Maritime Radio
Добавлен 20 июл 2013
ZLD Auckland Radio final radiotelephone transmission
Coast radio station ZLD in Auckland, New Zealand left the air on 30 September 1993. Here is their final radiotelephone transmission. For more information, visit maritimeradio.org
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Видео
ZLW Wellington Radio final radiotelephone transmission
Просмотров 36511 лет назад
Coast radio station ZLW in Wellington, New Zealand, left the air on 30 September 1993. Here is their final radiotelephone transmission. For more information, visit maritimeradio.org
ZLW Wellington Radio final Morse code transmission
Просмотров 108 тыс.11 лет назад
Coast radio station ZLW in Wellington, New Zealand, left the air on 30 September 1993. In this video, operator Peter Baird demonstrates the final radiotelegraph transmission. For more information, visit maritimeradio.org
Interview with ZLW Wellington Radio operator Peter Baird on the station's final day
Просмотров 85111 лет назад
Coast station Wellington Radio ZLW closed on 30 September 2013 after 82 years of service. For more information, visit maritimeradio.org
That is a Marconi 365 FZ straight key
Sloppy CW.....
lol! He made a few mistakes!
Page 53 The American Navy began to call the wireless the radiotelegraph.
The British still use the older term "wireless."
There in 1973 then Chatham is 73 to74 then zlb a grate time
Thirty years ago. Nice and smooth.
Well, since nobody's given it a shot yet, here's what I heard. CQ CQ CQ DE ZLW ZLW (calling all stations, this is ZLW) QS.. ZQSW (small mistake) 417 NAV WNG 110 = CQ CQ DE ZLW ZLW = NAV WNG 110 = ON 30TH SEPTEMBER ALL TRANSMISSIONS FROM COAST RADIO STATIONS AUCKLAND RADIO / ZLD AND WELLINGTON RADIO / ZLW WILL BE DIS (video cuts) PLACED BY TAUPO MARITIME RADIO I do have to say this guy's got a really nice fist (the ability to key well-formed Morse code)... very easy to copy and smooth with nice spacing. A lot of ops try to go fast but forget about fundamentals and run everything together. 73
That man is a musician 😊 He's got the rhythm. Perfect timing. Easy to read. Thanks for sharing
ZE BUCETA!!
Ze Buceta!!
73
Good item - thanks
Can you believe this was nearly 30 years ago
these videos make me cry. they killed an era and a professon, and i am not sure the world became a better place for it, or whether more sailors escape tragedy without the lifelines and human touch from ship to shore. 73 OG4U vy gd fist on straight key - music to my ears. QRK5
Hallucinant de tranmetttre et recevoir a cette vitesse !!!!!!! 73 a tous de marc
ZE BUCETA!!!
When I visited port of Aukland n Wellington Newzealand in 1981at that time I had communicated with Auckland radio n Wellington radio station.
me to in 1976
It was radio on a human scale. Behind every manipulator there was a man or a woman. Radio was the third dimension of the night.
Sounds like a hipster beat to me... awesome!
straight keying of ancient times- well done -professional operator is doing an exellent job - delicious music in my ears-tks 73
PJB absolute Gentleman and Legend, all other comments are redundant :) BZ Pete
You can still listen in on live Morse Code transmissions. Check out any station on websdr.org. The 40-meter band in the 7.000 to 7.125MHz spectrum has a lot of CW transmissions. There are all sorts of free software apps and programs for phones and computers to learn Morse Code as well. LCWO.net is also a good training tool.
that looks to me like a lambic key, he's not even pressing down on it.
Look again. The camera zooms in fir a full screen close up of the key towards the end of the video. Straight key operated with great style!!
He invented Darude sandstorm
Parabéns muito bom cw maravilhoso
it was an end of era. we could have kept the telegraph lines and maritime lines running. but anyway states sometimes thinks in terms of money.
be be boop beep
That translates to f
nice operator.
great video
these smart cars... do not use on swsmpy dampy swampishness valleys of myst they rely on Wireless direction. cause nk body taught em to drive
I joined the Malaysian Navy in the early 80s as a radio operator and was on the tactical division
He's got the rythm in his blood, he would probably make a top conductor in a philharmonic orchestra.
that if he is still alive ????
Every counter on Malls
สวยงามมาก
Sure do miss that form of Communications, but I guess time marches on. It seemed like such a Beautiful Language!
Jim Coulter I love Morse, still my favourite mode of comms on hf bands
Jim Coulter ex GBTT QE2. Loved working WOO in Pennsylvania on way in to NY or down the East coast heading towards Miami/Caribbean
Very nice but that guy made A LOT of errors during short transmission. Russian has beenworking upto 60 WPM witout errors (I copied them many times in 1990s). Capitalism is System of a Downs :))
You never went up and copied the FBI wanted Posters? Now that was some good code! That is what we copied along with when first out of RM school, Perfect Code!
@@jimcoulter5877 Unfortunately I was SWLing on maritime bands in 90s only (too young) and then western ships were very slow while Russians were very very good ops at the moment. I know on the West maritime CW hehyday was earlier, in the 30s, 40s etc... But never heard it myself.
@@zawir_usaodpowiadausa3354 The USCG Coastal Stations, Chesapeake/Virginia and Boston were terrible! AMVER messages on A1, OMG!
我們常用的鍵。
That's easy for you to say, mate!
Real CW ops use straight keys
No. Real CW ops use automatic and semi automatic keys where the throughput of information Is faster for given accuracy.
wow i cant read it anymore but during my time as radio operator this is only click ...i need practice now hahaha ..
How can you forget it, it is another Language you can just copy in your head.
@@jimcoulter5877 It's very far from a natural language, you don't learn the sounds, only the rythm (that's why you can use morse with light or by blinking your eyes), this is why you have to maintain your skills more often than a natural language.
Will never forget , so xctg .... missed my morse keyer then used to pump up by resting my four fingers on the edge of the table , let the thumb free and start sending my own message thru my imagination ... 13 on this stuff out of 24 seagoing years .... missed those days
My days doin this stuff as a ships Radio Officer (sparky) in the Merchant Navy. Enjoy ruclips.net/video/5wtNhQQdoyE/видео.html
Noticed that the operator takes his hand off the key between words. probably a great way to manage timing.
Rubbish. The morse is superb. The guy has been doing this for years. Oh, and I do the same thing sometimes to help ensure spacing.
@@daveperry7719 so rubbish or superb? I don't understand....
@@londonnight937 I assume some posted a negative comment about the operators morse code - which has been deleted after my comment. Just for clarification the ZLW ops morse is excellent.
Nope, just a habbit, I do the same in my straightkey QSO's as a hamoperator. I am also an ex merchant navy radio-operator .The operator of ZLW is doing just fine vy 73 fm PA5ABW
So what happened then? Did the Taupo station take over, as announced in the message?
Naw, they went Digital, no class at all, now all the Banana Boat swings are gone!
As a Coastie, we always enjoyed New York Coast Guard Radio NMY when the SS France the the Queen Mary came to town with their nice call signs! FNTT and GBSS forever a nice Tune!
@@jimcoulter5877 The Queen Mary & the Queen Elizabeth both had C/S GBTT. First Q Mary then Q Lizzie. GBTT has a better swing than GBSS 😁 NMG '70 - '73. What hath God wrought?
yes
I wish I knew what he was putting out!
cq de zlw nav wng 110 = on 30th september all transmissions from coastradio stations aucklandradio/zld and wellingtonradio/zlw will be displaced by taupo maritime radio BW fm NL
Bmwryder .
CQ CQ CQ (MEANS THIS IS A CALL TO ALL STATIONS) DE (THIS IS) ZLW (CALLSIGN OF COAST STATION) QSW (ONE OF THE INTERNATIONAL Q CODES USED TO COMMUNICATE A MYRIAD OF THINGS IN THIS INSTANCE CHANGE TO MEDIUM FREQUENCY 417 KHZ ) NAC WNG 110 = (LISTEN TO NAVIGATION WARNING 110) . So u can c that morse even when u can read it had quite a few shorthands and codes embedded in it QSL?
kookyuke QSL 5NN. DE VK1MIC
It was just their going away message. Sure wish they were still around! I miss 500 KC at night time with all the call signs from so many parts of the Globe! We could always tell the Russian vessels, their transmitters were very unstable and the tone would change as the vessel was in the storms.I sent a message to a Coast Guard Cutter in Alaska and got the old Dit Dit on 500 KC from a Russian trawler. Funny, we never saw any fishing Nets. LOL
Peter Baird, you haven't changed a bit! Nice job mate. Megan Frith