Ref the linked article - "you slowly tune the received signal until it reaches 
the magic tone that means "zero-beat". Usually, this is the same tone as your 
CW sidetone, 500-800 Hz, depending on your rig. You need a good ear for pitch."

Has everyone forgotten what to "zero beat" means or is it simply that the term 
has become so abused that it means something different now.   Zero beat used to 
mean to shift the frequency of one signal relative to the frequency of another 
signal until the audible beat frequency reduced to zero.   In those olden days, 
using an AM receiver to receive CW, the technique I remember was to set the BFO 
(Beat frequency Oscillator) to zero offset, tune the signal for zero beat, then 
adjust the BFO offset for desired pitch.

How can tuning a single frequency to desired pitch be zero beating.  There is 
no beat frequency to zero.

Andy, k3wyc
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