Tonight may have been a FIRST of it's kind for us.
Cooter and I met in Morse code before the ERIN NET and he passed his ERIN report to me via handsent Morse code (CW). It was easily copied on the first pass, FROM 800 MILES AWAY. I poked his message into my laptop and forwarded his report along with my own to the ERIN Digital net within the hour.
Why this use of CW (Morse code) matters:
1. Morse code absolutely outperforms voice in weak signal conditions, consuming far less battery power. Most strikingly, unlike the excellent digital modes we gratefully use, the only computer you need for Morse code is between your ears.
2. Cooter passed his report to me using his tiny, ULTRA-portable, LNR Precision
MTR 4b "QRP" rig. It can easily fit in a shirt pocket, runs on small batteries and draws very little power. His power output was five Watts.
3. This CW message relay capability, allowed him to report his area SITREP in Morse code to me, then I typed in to my laptop, and transmitted it to ERIN Digital net. Imagine just how HANDY this would be if he were having to backpack around TEOTWAWKI.
Something to consider: Many Unchained Prepper radio operators are communicating quite reliably at least once per week, to share 'local' information from many different regions, helping us to get 'the big picture'. Thats is VALUABLE!
QUESTION: On 10 minutes notice, Can we all RIGHT NOW >ADD< enough equipment to a BOB/backpack and then walk someplace, even somplace NEARBY, set-up the radio then reliably communicate with each other? Probably not. However, with small QRP Morse (CW) transceivers, this is quite normal.
So - congratulations Cooter!
- Sir John Honeybucket
Ps. Maybe we should have a 'Spy's Night Out' , a CW net from remote locations away from home, to sharpen the skills amd confidence.
It's been done before WITH coffee too!
https://youtu.be/dI6mMPPN4J4