II.9.10. Using ‘KN’

‘K’ = ‘over’. Sending just ‘K’ at the end of your over leaves the door open for 
other stations to break in. If you don’t want to be interrupted, send ‘KN’.

‘KN’ means that you want to hear ONLY the station whose callsign you just sent 
(= ‘go ahead, others keep out’ or ‘over to you only’), in other words: no 
breakers at this time please.

‘KN’ is mainly used when chaos is around the corner. A possible scenario: 
different stations are coming back to your CQ. You are decoding one partial 
call and you send: ‘ON4AB? DE G3ZZZ PSE UR CALL AGN (again) K’. The station 
ON4AB? answers you, but in addition several other stations call simultaneously, 
making it impossible to copy his call. The procedure is to call ON4AB? again 
and end your call with ‘KN’ instead of ‘K’, this to emphasize you only want to 
hear ON4AB? come back to you. Example: ‘ON4AB? DE G3ZZZ KN’ or even ‘ONLY 
ON4AB? DE G3ZZZ KN’. If you are still short of authority on the frequency you 
may try ‘ON4AB? DE G3ZZZ KN N N N’ (keep some extra space between the letters 
N). Now you are really getting nervous... 

Page 22: 
https://www.hamradio-operating-ethics.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/1-Eth-operating-EN-iaru-PRINT-1july2008.pdf

wunder
K6WRU
Walter Underwood
CM87wj
http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)

> On Mar 29, 2020, at 2:46 PM, Fred Jensen <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Officially, "K" is the prosign for "invitation to transmit."  OK, nothing is 
> "official" in ham radio, but hams have traditionally ended a CQ or a 
> transmission with "K", an invitation to transmit ... roughly the CW 
> equivalent of "over." Also traditionally, although less so, is "KN" which 
> roughly translates, "over to the station I'm in contact with only." Ending a 
> CQ with "KN" is thus mildly nonsensical since you're not in contact with 
> anyone yet.
> 
> However, consider that the Morse character for "?" translates to "IMI" [and 
> others such as "UTI" and "EWI"], the prosign for "Please repeat," or "I will 
> repeat."  In the heyday of radiotelegraphy, "INT" was used by the Navy as the 
> interrogatory prosign meaning "What follows is a question."  INT QSB, "Are my 
> signals fading?"  Hams and most commercial ops just used IMI for either, 
> still do, and somehow, we're not confused.  K or KN ... most will figure it 
> out.
> 
> 73,
> Fred ["Skip"] K6DGW
> Sparks NV DM09dn
> Washoe County
> 
> On 3/29/2020 2:13 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>> Jim, pardon my ignorance but KN means end of transmission or invite a 
>> specific station to transmit from what I see. Why would that deter a reply 
>> from a CQ? I am sure you are right but I would like to know the experienced 
>> understanding from a pro.
>> 
>> Brian VE3GMZ
>> 
> 
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