I read this article a couple of months ago. It seems to me that the author protests wayyyyy too much. He admits that iambic keying gives at least a 5% advantage, but then claims that it's not worth the pain of learning how to do it.

Well, I don't know about the rest of you, but it wasn't difficult for me to learn how to do it, and the 5% gain was certainly worth the little bit of effort it took on my part. I think N1FN, for whatever reason, had a lot of trouble getting the hang of it, and that got him so worked up that he's trying to defame the technique.

This is how it boils down for me: Try iambic keying, and if you like it and it's not too much hassle for you, use it. If you're not patient enough to learn iambic keying, or you are having trouble learning it, sell your dual-lever paddle and go out and buy a single- lever one.


73!

Dan KB6NU
----------------------------------------------------------
CW Geek and MI Affiliated Club Coordinator
Read my ham radio blog at www.kb6nu.com
LET'S GET MORE KIDS INTO HAM RADIO!





On Sep 10, 2007, at 8:27 AM, Bill Tippett wrote:

Iambic Keying - Debunking the Myth

by
Marshall G. Emm, N1FN

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