I do not own one of these products but perhaps I can help with the terminology.
An iambic paddle *always* has two levers, each with a separate fingerpiece. A non-iambic paddle *always* has a single lever but *may* sport a dual fingerpiece to increase the spacing between the thumb and forefinger. This goes to personal style and usually means the buyer asked for such a modification (or did it him/herself). An iambic paddle permits "squeeze" keying -or- the Op can choose to send non-iambic code with it. A non-iambic (i.e. "single lever") paddle can *never* send iambic code. Some Ops believe that sending non-iambic code with an iambic paddle leads to more errors because there are two separate contact levers involved; a non-iambic paddle eliminates one entire lever and its corresponding contacts. Ops who were brought up on semi-automatic keys ("bugs") - and who wish to maintain their "bug fist"- generally prefer single lever paddles and avoid making the transition to squeeze keying. Of course, this is a personal preference and there are Ops who are very capable of switching between the various keying styles. The art of CW - becoming proficient, appreciating its history, understanding its development, building a collection - is a wonderful subhobby within amateur radio. Selecting a paddle (or straight key or bug) is very personal "project". While it's certainly wise to ask questions, read reviews, and peruse the marketing information, in the end the buyer is the only one who will know when he or she has found "a winnner." I have a modest inventory of the "best" keys for "me" and it took me quite awhile to get there but the journey was an interesting and enlightening experience all the way. Never be shy about working with a manufacturer if you feel you need something beyond what the manufacturer offers. For example, I once asked to have an extra heavy base of specific dimension added to an already substantial base to make the key weigh an astounding number of pounds. In another instance, I wanted the fingerpiece style from one part of the product line to be mounted on a key from another part of the line. in a third instance, I felt the supplied carbon fiber fingerpiece was too thin and asked to have it doubled up. All these requests were filled with no problem. In fact, the manufacturer who doubled up my carbon fiber fingerpiece thought it was such a good idea that he made it standard. Another suggestion is to avoid spending extra money to buy a nameplate or call sign plate. If you later decide you want to sell your key in order to buy something else, that personalized plate, and the holes that were drilled in the key to mount it, might not meet with a buyer's approval. One line of reasoning says that being a good CW Op really has nothing to do with the brand names on our keys and paddles, or how much they cost. On a certain level that is a true statement. But there *is* great satisfaction in owning and operating high quality, well-engineered instruments. Isn't that why we buy Elecraft radios? 73, Stan WB2LQF www.wb2lqf.com On Mon, Jun 25, 2012 at 8:38 PM, Phil Hystad wrote: > These look nice -- does anyone here own one? I am probably weak on > understanding the terminology though. Does single-lever imply that it > is not an iambic squeeze type paddle. I noticed that the single-lever > version appears to have two levers but guessing that these do not > offer the Squeeze feature (which by the way I have never really > learned to use). > ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:Elecraft@mailman.qth.net This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html