High Speed Telegraphy Transmission

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2011
  • HST2011- Bielefeld, Germany
    She practices high speed morse code sending with great dexterity.
    It's about 200 characters per minute.
    Many Russian CW athletes can send CW like this.
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 289

  • @destroyer4416
    @destroyer4416 9 лет назад +185

    I would panic being at the receiving end of that XD

    • @eizlan48
      @eizlan48 3 года назад +9

      If I was at the receiving end of that, I wouldn’t even bother decoding it. I’d just take my cats, find a nearby nuclear bunker and live down there forever.

    • @AlexejSvirid
      @AlexejSvirid Месяц назад

      Don't panic, OM!
      Send QRS instead. 😎

  • @Tabbyf
    @Tabbyf 8 лет назад +379

    Receiving fast is what's important. Anyone can send fast code but it doesn't matter when no one can decode it.

    • @iz7geg
      @iz7geg 6 лет назад +25

      Yes you are right, but ,are you sure everyone can send fast, because here hearing om that at 15 wpm making mistakes every two caracters..

    • @experimental_av
      @experimental_av 6 лет назад +2

      i can't

    • @nlhn638
      @nlhn638 2 года назад +1

      Although it isn't part of the art, machines can receive the code, and you can probably read that as fast.
      I think morse has a good future in phones, believe it or not. Phone keyboard words per minute are sloppy. What if instead input were in morse? Theoretically, since the dash on a keyboard --- using two buttons --- has little reason to be longer, if should be even faster.
      Thus, I think that although fast receiving is important, and obviously on air you should only send as fast as others can receive, if we found other uses for sending morse, speed could be very important.

    • @davedoe6445
      @davedoe6445 Год назад +2

      can you send random groups at her speed?

    • @seanwatts8342
      @seanwatts8342 Год назад +1

      100% agree, otherwise it's gibberish

  • @hikerfrost
    @hikerfrost 11 лет назад +43

    No. She's sending random letter groups. They are used for morse code practice and speed drills because it requires more attention to the message being sent (you can't just skim over it and send from memory) and better simulates the callsigns ham radio operators encounter on the air, which are not logical words or phrases, but something closer to random alpha-numeric groups.

  • @opencct
    @opencct 9 лет назад +263

    Would be more interesting if the code were audible ;)

  • @bocatablanco
    @bocatablanco 12 лет назад +27

    WOW! Nice keying!
    I love to see that young people continue learning this lovely transmission mode!

    • @willmears1111
      @willmears1111 3 года назад +1

      Girl number one is excellent. Danny from Nebraska could copy at 105 wpm. Incredible. I was in the 30-40 wpm range. It was music to listen to him copy.

    • @willmears1111
      @willmears1111 3 года назад

      105 wpm is 105 words x 5 letters per word = 525 letters per minute

  • @jo2slz
    @jo2slz  12 лет назад +38

    Thank you for the comments, every one.
    There is no secret mechanism in the key. The super performance is made by her skillful fingers.

    • @user-jo9my7to1d
      @user-jo9my7to1d 3 года назад

      Ok

    • @mj_nooker
      @mj_nooker 3 года назад

      How much time per day, per week, per month need to practise to get good muscles speed/memory results?
      Im a scratch dj, so I know, that for good hands/fingers memory of the new scratch-trick I need a lot of practice min 10 minutes per day 3/7 days for a couple of months. So what about this teq?

  • @DigisDen
    @DigisDen 9 лет назад +64

    Now I know where those numbers stations come from, its these girls practising :)

    • @PolishRatEuropean
      @PolishRatEuropean 8 лет назад +4

      Darren Williams Where is the number station, Mason?

    • @mosessoldaccount5095
      @mosessoldaccount5095 4 года назад +1

      LoL

    • @MrRW1980
      @MrRW1980 3 года назад

      no it has nothing to do with number stations because the morse you hear there is made by windows XP programm that translates text in morse...the morse text of number stations is never sent by hand....this seems to be a exam where it is decided which canditats are approvedfor further schooling...one of the morse apparats is russian and it was never made in bielefeld but this center is in st peterburg...

  • @MrTPF1
    @MrTPF1 5 лет назад +8

    I've never seen a CW operator place the key like the first gal was doing, but man, she was JAMMING on that thing! The second operator wasn't nearly as fast, but she had beautiful hands! They were also sending all numbers which is much harder than letters.

  • @TainoHans
    @TainoHans 3 дня назад

    I used to be a professional Radio Officer, but I can only dream of this speed. Great job!

  • @fb314
    @fb314 8 лет назад +59

    The second girl either sounds like she has a cold or was crying. Hear the sniffles? She also is acting like she is having a hard time and wants to quit but the instructor is pushing her to continue.

    • @ikannunaplays
      @ikannunaplays 4 года назад +5

      Yeah she definitely didn't have speed like the others, very intimidating, but are they checking accuracy?

    • @vitobru8361
      @vitobru8361 3 года назад +1

      @@ikannunaplays yes they check accuracy

  • @davezinetti666
    @davezinetti666 Год назад +3

    I remember my first cw on amateur radio back in 1996 I guess I must have sent faster than I realized cause when another station replied to my cq, he was sending faster than I was able to copy. Lol.

  • @fb314
    @fb314 8 лет назад +13

    Watched it again. She's definitely very frustrated and want to quit and is trying to hold back the tears. I saw it in what I could see in her facial expressions.

  • @timelord1137
    @timelord1137 2 года назад +7

    PSE QRS🥺
    Таких световых скоростей в эфире конечно нет, но наблюдать за мастерами ключа - одно удовольствие)

  • @fredkarno8602
    @fredkarno8602 Год назад +3

    Very impressive. I was a Radio Telegraphist in the Military but was only trained up to 36wpm. Brilliant.

    • @MalikethTheBlackBlade1
      @MalikethTheBlackBlade1 Год назад

      Has there been any jobs in your civilian life that made this skill useful?

  • @guardianobserver6593
    @guardianobserver6593 7 лет назад +1

    They probably think that roof climbing was better than this.

  • @hikerfrost
    @hikerfrost 11 лет назад +4

    She's sending somewhere north of 50wpm. Most ops I've seen that work at those speeds don't use a particularly compact motion. They keep at least one of their fingers off the paddle. The first op is maybe overdoing it a little, but the second op looks pretty normal.

  • @flips1275
    @flips1275 10 лет назад +4

    Actually CW (or A!A as it's now known) is transmitting by directly keying the carrier of a transmitter. MCW (or A2A) is transmitting by modulating a tone onto the carrier and can be heard on ordinary AM radios. Both have been used to transmit morse. MCW (A2A) is often used for transmissions from aeronautical ident bedacons

    • @marcisberzins
      @marcisberzins Год назад

      "Actually CW (or A!A as it's now known)" - girls in the video are sending CW, not A1A. Maybe it is technically incorrect, but historically one of "CW" meanings is "Morse Code" regardless of transmission mode.

  • @cezarfreitasfripp5943
    @cezarfreitasfripp5943 7 лет назад +3

    IMPRESSIONANTE DA CONDIÇÃO DE ALTA VELOCIDADE, PARABENS! !!!!

  • @1903A3shooter
    @1903A3shooter 12 лет назад +2

    Sure love to hear the tones.

  • @joesmoe6947
    @joesmoe6947 11 месяцев назад +1

    The first girl was going off on the second girl for sleeping with her man. The second girl was nervous and trying to say no that they only kissed and it was brief. Then the first girl shut off her receiver. The second girl was never seen again… was a huge tragedy.

  • @sjb3460
    @sjb3460 2 месяца назад

    I heard about those things when my parents got their Ham Radio licenses back in the 60's.

  • @cwguy8960
    @cwguy8960 4 года назад +7

    Heh, at 2:51 even the Coach is wearing athletic gear!

    • @erwe1054
      @erwe1054 Месяц назад

      мастер спорта

  • @yv4dea
    @yv4dea 9 лет назад

    oh my god! she is really awesome!

  • @SuperPierone
    @SuperPierone 10 лет назад +2

    Respect from Italy

  • @YV5EN
    @YV5EN 11 лет назад +12

    200 characters per minute means 40 word per minute (40 wpm)

    • @rlgr
      @rlgr 3 года назад

      Do you got this characters?

    • @YV5EN
      @YV5EN 3 года назад

      @@rlgr She hears tones in her headphones. We don`t.

    • @scootergrant8683
      @scootergrant8683 3 года назад

      40. That's insane for Morse Code.

  • @ivan69420.
    @ivan69420. 3 года назад

    Everybody gangsta 'till the girl start typing morse at 200 wpm

  • @top10time32
    @top10time32 4 года назад +6

    She is gonna beat pubg mobile for sure with this speed.

  • @Giovanniram22
    @Giovanniram22 11 лет назад

    I am impressed!
    I would like to know if this is for her exams for Ham operator or she is prepared for navy officer regarding transmitters!

  • @awesomejamie4453
    @awesomejamie4453 8 лет назад +1

    that should be an Olympic sport

  • @kc2zxl
    @kc2zxl 12 лет назад

    Awesome!

  • @thequarantinecatholic
    @thequarantinecatholic Год назад

    It is interesting how they have their keys going sidewise for the sideswiper

  • @TheUnboxer073
    @TheUnboxer073 9 лет назад

    MAN THIS GIRL DONE ALLOT OF WORK ABOUT MORSE CODE!!

  • @PU4APB
    @PU4APB Год назад

    Fenomenal!

  • @ibrahimhcaglayan
    @ibrahimhcaglayan 11 лет назад +3

    That is truly amazing! Imagine you are the spy at the other end of that xmission and you need to get good copy! Frankly I'd be caught and shot in no time.

  • @adventureguy4119
    @adventureguy4119 29 дней назад

    Imagine being a dyslexic telegraph draftee from Arkansas

  • @Flickchaser
    @Flickchaser 11 лет назад +2

    @William DeZauche- Could you please explain the difference between GPW and WPM? This stuff looks fascinating. Few things left that allow for that degree of individuality and are so historical.In the book "The Red Orchestra"-V.E. Tarrant, tells of Soviet spies in Germany and nazi occupied territories having tremendous workloads, operating clandestine transmitters and sending code in 5 figure or digit cipher groups for hours non stop while radio detection squads try to track them down.

  • @fotomaful
    @fotomaful 10 лет назад

    Respect!!!

  • @ManofCulture
    @ManofCulture 10 месяцев назад

    That's how my mom's keypad phone sounds like when she's angry at someone..

  • @-viny_cast_retro__new-231
    @-viny_cast_retro__new-231 4 года назад +1

    TAS Morse code speedrun II

  • @MickLBrad
    @MickLBrad 11 лет назад

    Yes because they don't listen to each character, they hear an entire word just as you do when you read something.

  • @dieselscience
    @dieselscience 11 лет назад

    No, CW = "continuous wave" another term for transmitting Morse on radio. The wave is keyed on or it's not. It is not modulated the same way a voice transmission would be, also it's efficient. Numbers stations could use CW - sometimes they don't, they use voice. This key is called a "bug" and it goes two directions - one for 'dit' the other way for 'dah' When she lets go it goes to center and makes nothing. We only hear clicks of the bug because we don't hear the tone generator or just faintly.

  • @jo2slz
    @jo2slz  11 лет назад +1

    If you are interested in High Speed Telegraphy competitions, I recommend you visit the IARU's homepage.You can find the HST related pages with keywords "IARU HST."

  • @cherryteimo6724
    @cherryteimo6724 10 лет назад +2

    Молодцы, девушки! :)

  • @user-pc1xo6no2y
    @user-pc1xo6no2y 7 месяцев назад

    Amaizing

  • @CliffFoxKU4GW
    @CliffFoxKU4GW 11 лет назад +2

    I would like to hear the tones!

  • @saulravello8690
    @saulravello8690 Год назад

    Extraordinaria!!!

  • @ultort
    @ultort 7 лет назад +12

    What are you doing during your weekend ?
    I send morse code

  • @DK9NL
    @DK9NL 11 лет назад +1

    crazy technique!

  • @K1DTC
    @K1DTC 2 года назад

    I need this girl for my next CW WW CONTEST.

  • @heclam
    @heclam 9 лет назад

    I'm interested on one ( at least) of those Practice Sheet "books"
    Do you know here I can get one?

    • @MauriatOttolink
      @MauriatOttolink 9 лет назад +1

      heclam Write them out yourself. You won't remember the from the writing out but fairly quickly you will start to recognise as you practice on them.
      Easy...write them out backwards and start again. Then rewrite from vertical columns. When you run out of ideas, write a whole new list and go through the same whenever start to recognise letter groups.

  • @Buizie
    @Buizie 11 лет назад

    SICK

  • @avialiner
    @avialiner 8 месяцев назад

    This is the level of any russian schoolchild, nice

  • @n2uhc
    @n2uhc 11 лет назад

    And since they base a "word" on a 5-character word, that works out to about 40 WPM. Still pretty impressive.

  • @24balla28
    @24balla28 2 года назад

    pretty good

  • @davejacobsen3014
    @davejacobsen3014 7 лет назад

    The documents are European characters, but these ladies are Russian or Cyrillic script on equipment. I am impressed!

  • @jasonsweet228
    @jasonsweet228 11 лет назад

    Oh crap, she knows her stuff :D

  • @Rocketman88002
    @Rocketman88002 2 месяца назад

    I miss the old school telegraphers that existed from the late sixties back. Each had a very identifiable fist and 60 w.p.m. was the minimum for Western Union and train depot operators.

  • @UF4S
    @UF4S 10 лет назад

    Молодцы девчонки!!!!!!

  • @tokki5024
    @tokki5024 3 года назад

    Respect from Korea 🇰🇷 !!!

  • @combatwombat71
    @combatwombat71 9 лет назад +2

    I saw her send quite a few di-di-di-di-di-di-di-di (error) signals...
    Three things surprised me. The angle of the paddle, how much contact movement there was, and how much hand movement she had.

    • @fb314
      @fb314 8 лет назад +4

      They had to hold both keys down and the first girl was expending too much energy slapping the crap out of her paddle. I'm a cw noob, but I'd think if they had properly heavy bases and close contacts and light springs, that they would need just simple finger movement to operate the key at high speed. The first girl was sending code in a fury. I am guessing this video was made and the students were pushed to their sending limits. The first girl was all tense. The second, crying.

  • @steveayers6020
    @steveayers6020 Год назад

    If you are running a number station you can send at 250 cpm while the receiver has a decoder decoding on the receive end. Just a thought.

  • @Ryan_7389
    @Ryan_7389 3 года назад

    The girls sending a sos to get out of detention

  • @fabianosantos9130
    @fabianosantos9130 5 лет назад

    Olá. Seria isso ,exames de cw ou aulas de cw ?

  • @ningis21
    @ningis21 10 лет назад +6

    This is great.... is there a video of her receiving ????

    • @parseerror1831
      @parseerror1831 4 года назад +2

      You can probably check on the hub

    • @master582
      @master582 3 года назад

      @@parseerror1831 ya baby lol

  • @peterbarns9438
    @peterbarns9438 11 лет назад

    Achtung! Der ENIGMA CODE! They must be contacting some U-Boat somewhere.

  • @PXJF
    @PXJF 11 лет назад

    YEAH!

    • @rlgr
      @rlgr 3 года назад

      O que q você tá fazendo aqui? Kkkkk

  • @willmears1111
    @willmears1111 Год назад

    She is good!

  • @ai5dd
    @ai5dd 2 года назад

    Are those cootie or iambic keys? The later ones look like single paddle electronic keyers.

  • @camprocketsound2601
    @camprocketsound2601 3 года назад +1

    Think how much faster she'd be if she didn't move her fingers so far away from the key....

    • @Ghostwritersinthesky
      @Ghostwritersinthesky 3 года назад

      yes and then banging the fingers against that elbug ("key"), after some time it will break.

  • @anthonychristianjaen9564
    @anthonychristianjaen9564 9 лет назад +16

    Those who doesnt understand think it s obsolete. My qrp 3 watts smaller than a postcard equipment can talk aa far as malaysia using mosecode and its free powered by solar panel i can cary around

    • @jennoscura2381
      @jennoscura2381 8 лет назад +2

      +anthony christian Jaen There are better modes for QRP than CW. However CW is about as simple as it gets. I need to sit down to practice Morse code. I enjoy QRP operation. It would be pretty cool to do it with one of those tiny little radios that fits inside a small tin.

    • @fb314
      @fb314 8 лет назад

      +Rich The reason the military liked it was that it was effective, simple, and cheap to use and deploy. It got the job done and didn't cost a lot.

    • @guardianobserver6593
      @guardianobserver6593 7 лет назад

      anthony christian Jaen
      And what you said outside the exchange of few numbers?

  • @DennisMathias
    @DennisMathias Месяц назад

    We can't hear the code so it seems faster than it is. But still very skilled. Is this video still valid? Are they still teaching? Interesting that this is russia but the printing is english not cyrillic.

  • @ricsanders69
    @ricsanders69 3 года назад

    Wow!

  • @mykejerichocerenado8083
    @mykejerichocerenado8083 2 года назад

    can someone enlighten me on what and how that 5 letter thingy works?

  • @Greyline77
    @Greyline77 11 лет назад

    Imagine a XYL, who even beats you on the key. Must be every hams dream, hi. 73´s !

  • @radiosification
    @radiosification 12 лет назад

    lol is that a numbers station or something

  • @NamasenITN
    @NamasenITN 11 месяцев назад

    Would they be able to send equally fast, "mind-send" actually, without reading the text to send?

  • @user-qw3so3rv6c
    @user-qw3so3rv6c 6 лет назад

    오 이런거는 어디서 구매 하셧나요?

  • @eogg25
    @eogg25 4 года назад

    How did they get them interested in doing it.

  • @Flickchaser
    @Flickchaser 11 лет назад

    sorry for the error-should read GPM not GPW.

  • @erwe1054
    @erwe1054 Месяц назад

    Ребята, ну закажите им топовые манипуляторы! Чьто это за самопал

  • @GospodinJean
    @GospodinJean 3 года назад

    Reads: Moscow, please send nukes

  • @N2FQ
    @N2FQ 5 лет назад

    Inspiring.. Any one have info on those paddles? I googled russian paddle -> Images, but nothing shows up that looks like these. tnx. Fernando N2FQ/6

  • @ophofmichael168au
    @ophofmichael168au 6 лет назад

    Did you read the description CW athletes watch this face a future in the Olympics perhaps hehehe

  • @fabienfournier9141
    @fabienfournier9141 7 лет назад

    Elle est épatante , cette première candidate .

  • @elisilva3013
    @elisilva3013 9 лет назад +1

    очень хорошо!!!! N1 Muito bom!!!!!

  • @Alex2K
    @Alex2K 8 лет назад +7

    Oo Romania 3:34 girl is from Romania :D
    I am proud being Romanian !

  • @va3paw
    @va3paw 11 лет назад

    How many WPM is that?

  • @cchimozmin
    @cchimozmin 2 года назад

    I take it the paddle is welded to the table?

  • @tyrstone3539
    @tyrstone3539 4 года назад

    Isn't this for that competition?

  • @Roger7351IT
    @Roger7351IT 11 лет назад

    Is a cw number station?? the numberstation one time pad have 1 group with 5 number, tipic of the number station!

  • @zoolkhan
    @zoolkhan 12 лет назад

    they practise numbers only?

  • @glenbirbeck4098
    @glenbirbeck4098 5 лет назад

    Without the sound its too much like railroad Morse which was only clicks. I never learned that form of Morse so a key'd tone would help KC1CCG

  • @micsherwood4930
    @micsherwood4930 10 лет назад

    HOW is this possible? What in my training is missing or is it simply the amount of time spent sending that gets them to to the point where it is a natural response?

    • @timothykearns2232
      @timothykearns2232 10 лет назад

      It becomes a natural response.
      Practice makes perfect, as other skills.
      She's very, very good!
      Russian (I think that's what they're speaking) amateur radio ops are the best by far. DE NN6A

    • @micsherwood4930
      @micsherwood4930 10 лет назад +1

      It's a skill i'd really like to have. Finding a mentor is the harder part.

    • @timothykearns2232
      @timothykearns2232 10 лет назад

      Mic Sherwood Yes, Mic.
      It can be hard to find a mentor.
      W6JNX (sk) helped me to get very good at morse code.
      I delivered the paper at Norm's house, (I was 13.)
      I got my Novice ticket in 1969, and he took me "under his wing" to get good at it.
      I've seen a bunch of really good posts here that give good advice about learning the code.
      Don't get discouraged! You can do it.

    • @micsherwood4930
      @micsherwood4930 10 лет назад

      I have a great paddle, but where can i get a high quality decoder with audio that works well enough?

    • @timothykearns2232
      @timothykearns2232 10 лет назад

      Try to look at MFJ's website.

  • @Sailorunderzero
    @Sailorunderzero 8 лет назад

    Almanlar Bu çağda hala mors eğitimi veriyorlarsa demek ki önümüzdeki yıllarda muhtemelen kullanım alanları olacaktır. Bizde nasipleniriz artık. Dakikada 200 olmasa da 60 basarız çok şükür.

  • @geirha75
    @geirha75 3 месяца назад

    It would be exciting with decoding competition at > 40 wpm. And I'm not sure if she hits the paddles correctly. I mean, less movement with tighter paddles would be more efficient.

  • @TomZentra
    @TomZentra 11 лет назад

    So this is what a Russian spy training center looks like. No wonder 007 had so many good looking women!

  • @rogeratr
    @rogeratr 12 лет назад

    Great ! Excellent manipulation !
    73
    Roger PY3RGR
    Brasil

  • @1Administrater
    @1Administrater 11 лет назад

    he is right.

  • @hillbilly4christ638
    @hillbilly4christ638 3 года назад

    Is that a bottle of wodka by the second girl. So she is drunk keying.

  • @sumardiyono1
    @sumardiyono1 10 лет назад +1

    good job, girl.. (from indonesia)