Does each station get to pick the "frequency" their morse code is transmitted at? When I say "frequency" I'm referring to how high or low the sound/tone of it is? When listening to the video I notice various high and low "tones" from the morse code messages.
Good question. It's more like AM radio (every station picks a spot) than analog TV (where things lock into 'channels'). Because of that, a station may be slightly off-frequency, which makes the pitch of the Morse Code tone shift up or down.
In this video, I'm simply using a Winkeyer (USB interface to the rig). It allows many logging programs to send CW from the PC to the rig. The logger is the Field Day logging app from the N3FJP group. Our club uses that for all the field day stations.
Great op!
nice video
Does each station get to pick the "frequency" their morse code is transmitted at? When I say "frequency" I'm referring to how high or low the sound/tone of it is? When listening to the video I notice various high and low "tones" from the morse code messages.
Good question. It's more like AM radio (every station picks a spot) than analog TV (where things lock into 'channels'). Because of that, a station may be slightly off-frequency, which makes the pitch of the Morse Code tone shift up or down.
What program are you using to log and send cw
In this video, I'm simply using a Winkeyer (USB interface to the rig). It allows many logging programs to send CW from the PC to the rig. The logger is the Field Day logging app from the N3FJP group. Our club uses that for all the field day stations.