Telegraph Key: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "A Telegraph Key, also called a CW Key, Morse Key, or simply Key, is the type of momentary switch used for sending Morse Code via CW. Telegraph Keys, as par the name, were originally invented for landline telegraphy but morse code and thus the keys also saw use in early radio telegraphy, in the modern day, keys are available in straight, paddle, and iambic configurations. (There should be a chart of morse keys under this)" |
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A Telegraph Key, also called a CW Key, Morse Key, or simply Key, is the type of momentary switch used for sending Morse Code via CW. | A '''Telegraph Key''', also called a CW Key, Morse Key, or simply Key, is the type of momentary switch used for sending Morse Code via [[CW]]. | ||
Telegraph Keys, as par the name, were originally invented for landline telegraphy but morse code and thus the keys also saw use in early radio telegraphy, in the modern day, keys are available in straight, paddle, and iambic configurations. (There should be a chart of morse keys under this) | Telegraph Keys, as par the name, were originally invented for landline telegraphy but morse code and thus the keys also saw use in early radio telegraphy, in the modern day, keys are available in straight, paddle, and iambic configurations. (There should be a chart of morse keys under this) | ||
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Latest revision as of 15:48, 1 March 2024
A Telegraph Key, also called a CW Key, Morse Key, or simply Key, is the type of momentary switch used for sending Morse Code via CW.
Telegraph Keys, as par the name, were originally invented for landline telegraphy but morse code and thus the keys also saw use in early radio telegraphy, in the modern day, keys are available in straight, paddle, and iambic configurations. (There should be a chart of morse keys under this)
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