Hi all,

Someone recently told me that he'd benefitted throughout his life from learning 
Morse code as a teen. Ham radio helped him cope. He's gone on to promote Morse 
because it can help kids with certain cognitive or social issues. Such problems 
are exacerbated by social media, these days. We all know of teens who've ended 
up ostracized or worse.

He was wondering what the ham community may be able to do for them. 

I proposed a simple ($5-$10), unlicensed CW transceiver (kit or assembled or 
both) that would put out maybe 1 milliwatt. It would serve as a code-practice 
oscillator for solo use. But with a short wire hanging from the PCB, kids could 
work "DX" -- like across a room, or better yet, outdoors. 

This got his attention. I went on to describe a scenario that he found very 
plausible, based on his experience with Morse advocacy: You hand kids the 
little modules (just a PCB with a built-in 4x AAA battery pack, code key, 
antenna wire, and cheap earbuds), and ask them to try sending/receiving a few 
letters. The complete code would be silkscreened onto the PCB. After they try 
this, you say, "Now see how far apart you can get and still copy you friend's 
signal." This is where the magic happens, at least for those of us who have 
been leveraging action-at-a-distance ourselves for many years :)  It takes 
things a step beyond ordinary code practice. Connects kids to other kids. At 
best it could serve as a bridge to a world outside themselves. 

I'm picturing the little rig as SA602 based, with one crystal for TX and one 
for RX, running so little power than licensing is a non-issue. Frequency? TBD. 
Something available in cheap fundamental crystals from Digikey. Each one would 
have its crystals offset slightly from the others, so the effect of having a 
number of them in one room might be a bit like being on a crowded CW band. 
Picking out the pitch of a signal of interest and copying it is a skill many of 
us have learned. I'm sure kids who are motivated would be able to do it as well.

It should not have debilitating clicks or thumps when keyed. The only control 
should be for volume. It should be full break-in, which at this power level is 
easily obtained.

This is a project I would gladly take on myself if not for my 
greater-than-full-time commitments to Elecraft products. I'm hoping there's a 
tinkerer out there with more free time who could start from a minimal 
description and design the little rig.  The gentleman I spoke to has been 
frustrated over the years in trying to get his message out, and in trying to 
find ways to take Morse code to a wider range of kids. He felt that this idea 
had a lot of merit.

If you're interested in this project, or know of something that matches this 
description that's already available, please contact me directly.

73,
Wayne
N6KR

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