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-   -   Anyone proficient in MORSE CODE? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/488951-anyone-proficient-morse-code.html)

WolfeMacleod 07-31-2009 07:50 PM

Anyone proficient in MORSE CODE?
 
Yeah. You heard me.
I need someone proficient in Morse code to decode a bit of audio. I'm pretty sure it's Morse Code.
I've read some conflicting stuff on this particular piece, and nobody seems to know for sure.

WolfeMacleod 07-31-2009 07:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by turbocarrera (Post 4810841)
yyz? That's a morse meter. Sorry i can't help ya.


yyz?

emcon5 07-31-2009 08:02 PM

YYZ

slodave 07-31-2009 08:14 PM

Here ya go...
http://morsecode.scphillips.com/jtranslator.html

porsche4life 07-31-2009 08:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by emcon5 (Post 4810850)

Trying playing that crap on Rock Band.

rattlsnak 07-31-2009 08:32 PM

if you still need someone let me know, my BIL is current on morse..

Embraer 07-31-2009 08:48 PM

I am. 20wpm when I got my Advanced Ham License. What do you need?

gchappel 07-31-2009 10:11 PM

Thanks for bringing back old memories. I had it for my Ham license 40 years ago- don't remember a bleeping thing about it now!
Gary

WolfeMacleod 08-01-2009 12:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by emcon5 (Post 4810850)

That was the only thing I was thinking to, but I wasn't sure.


Quote:

Originally Posted by slodave (Post 4810857)

Thanks, Dave. Not quite what I'm lookign for. I've seen that one before. The audio piece I have is too fast to be to decipher . or -
What I need is,..someone who used to translate Morse Code as it was coming over the waves...military or something. Do it by ear.

WolfeMacleod 08-01-2009 12:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Embraer (Post 4810903)
I am. 20wpm when I got my Advanced Ham License. What do you need?

Embraer, sending you a PM.

slodave 08-01-2009 12:17 AM

What! I can't believe that you can't slow it down ;). Good luck!

HardDrive 08-01-2009 02:16 AM

I KNEW I shouldn't have sent you an ounce of mushrooms and the Beetle's white album.

:P

Joeaksa 08-01-2009 05:41 AM

Used to be when I had hair... ham and pilot both require it...

Just write it down then decode it, not that difficult.

Porsche-O-Phile 08-01-2009 06:57 AM

Yes. I've done some CW stuff for ham radio and I find it invaluable while flying on instruments to identify navaids without having to fumble around with charts and add to my workload.

FastCarFan 08-01-2009 07:09 AM

I don't know anything about Morse code, but I heard a story recently on NPR that I think you will enjoy. Here is the link (where you can hear the audio story): http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=106606968. If I recall correctly the audio story may be a little longer.

Every night since March 1929, a bright, red beacon has flashed on the Pittsburgh skyline. The beacon sits atop the historic Grant Building and, in international Morse code, spells the city's name. At least, that's what it's supposed to do.

While waiting to see this year's Fourth of July fireworks with friends, graduate student Tom Stepleton noticed something strange about the beacon: the letter "k."

Stepleton, who is studying at Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute, tells NPR's Robert Siegel that his Morse code may have been rusty, but he had no trouble recognizing the errant "k" because his sister's name begins with the letter.

But the "k" wasn't the only problem in the message. There were three errors, says Stepleton. Instead of "Pittsburgh," the beacon spelled "Pitetsbkrrh."

The beacon hasn't always been wrong. Stepleton himself can vouch for it being correct as recently as two years ago.

When asked how the code could have gone so wrong, Stepleton says time is the likely culprit.

"If the system is still using 1930s-era technology, the actual generation of the dots and dashes is probably electro-mechanical," he says.

And that means the electrical contacts that create the beacon's blink can be tarnished or moved out of place over time.

When Stepleton first noticed the wayward beacon, he posted a video of it on YouTube and contacted the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

NPR asked Stepleton to return for another look at the beacon Monday night to see if the message had changed.

Indeed, it had: Instead of "Pitetsbkrrh," it read "Tpebtsaurgh."

The Grant Building and its beacon are owned by McKnight Property Management. A representative told NPR that the device producing the incorrect code has been sent in for repair.

But there is no word yet when the beacon will once again spell P-I-T-T-S-B-U-R-G-H.


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