army morse code pt 01

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  • Опубліковано 11 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 266

  • @dangarrison9373
    @dangarrison9373 10 років тому +347

    "if you think so, you're wrong." this is amazing.

  • @crownblue89
    @crownblue89 9 років тому +75

    These old tutorials are so mildly satisfying!

  • @Zhanchu
    @Zhanchu 5 років тому +314

    Me trying to sleep at 3am
    The mosquito:

  • @assassin7707
    @assassin7707 12 років тому +130

    And Romeo could care less, lmfao. I love this video.

  • @meg2231
    @meg2231 4 роки тому +92

    Just in the last week I've gotten interested in mores code and watched dozens of videos on the subject, this is actually a great way of explaining it

  • @evans8486
    @evans8486 3 роки тому +42

    7:49 it’s kinda crazy to think that hearing this series of beeps alone would get your adrenaline going as a soldier but are meaningless to a normal person

  • @neurofiedyamato8763
    @neurofiedyamato8763 10 років тому +46

    Tutorials back then are awesome.

  • @microsoftpain
    @microsoftpain 2 роки тому +11

    I'm learning morse, and these old videos are more helpful than most I've seen.

  • @papioscarw
    @papioscarw 12 років тому +50

    Being a licensed Ham for over 45 years and a Navy Vet am ROTFLMAO at these old training films. Love 'em.

    • @YoussefFishere
      @YoussefFishere Рік тому

      Was the dude in the introduction actually saying anything or was it gibberish?

  • @900milesfromnormal3
    @900milesfromnormal3 4 роки тому +40

    1:29 "You've got to send rhythmically." And it was at this point, I half expected this training film to turn into a 1940's style musical.
    If you want to be understood critically,
    You need to send the code rhythmically
    You have to send your dah
    Without going blah blah blah
    You need to send your dits
    So everyone will get it
    Always send your code
    So it can down the road
    And remember when it comes to Morse
    Never ever, no never ever stray from the course

    • @sage9836
      @sage9836 2 роки тому +1

      Hey, record this as a song or poem on video. Too good to only exist as a comment.

    • @tomahawkboys1625
      @tomahawkboys1625 5 місяців тому

      Thank you

  • @glitch1182
    @glitch1182 6 років тому +293

    I love this video. From a generation that was straight to the point and had little tolerance for bullshit.

    • @turkey_cigarman
      @turkey_cigarman 3 роки тому +7

      you're right.

    • @tyrstone3539
      @tyrstone3539 2 роки тому

      @@turkey_cigarman wvt

    • @Pikasatupu75
      @Pikasatupu75 2 роки тому +1

      That is why they are called the "Greatest Generation"

    • @sandynewman5533
      @sandynewman5533 2 роки тому +1

      1966, sons of the greatest generation, again at war, in Vietnam. Communication was even more important.

    • @NonsensicalSpudz
      @NonsensicalSpudz 2 роки тому

      @@Pikasatupu75 wrong generation mate

  • @ojkolsrud1
    @ojkolsrud1 11 років тому +97

    Man, could they make tutorial vidoes back in the day!

    • @speed150mph
      @speed150mph 3 роки тому +2

      No kidding. I’m a mechanic, and in trade school they were still showing us some videos from back in the 30s or 40s because they did such a good job on explaining things. For example how a differential works

  • @HeavilyArmed
    @HeavilyArmed 10 років тому +74

    My grandfather likely watched something like this when he served as a radio operator in WW2.

    • @aljames7839
      @aljames7839 2 роки тому

      My gf mcode wireless operator navy ww2was called White what was yours called?

  • @Ddochim
    @Ddochim 5 років тому +42

    lmao why am i thinking that cap would show up in his chair like "so, you're learning morse code"

  • @ashn333
    @ashn333 3 роки тому +8

    I love hearing him say the dahs and dits lol I just now realized music can be rhythmically based on Morse

  • @RafaH57
    @RafaH57 3 роки тому +8

    All i can imagine is how fatal one mistake can be

    • @crtusr
      @crtusr 2 роки тому +1

      It depends of the word, awe (.- .-- .) and are (.- .-. .) really simmilar but it would not make sense grammatically.

  • @8AD858D8
    @8AD858D8 4 роки тому +10

    Can't imagine being able to wire a brain to keep up with this, than add in some battle noise for background. Much respect for the men that could do this.

    • @George-bb9yi
      @George-bb9yi 3 роки тому +3

      There were guys in Vietnam who could call in artillery strikes while running with a leg mounted morse code key!

  • @svinjamaria
    @svinjamaria 10 років тому +92

    and now im ready for the military

    • @JohnPaul-ej8mm
      @JohnPaul-ej8mm 9 років тому +16

      your ready for WW2 maybe lol

    • @muhdnoor09
      @muhdnoor09 3 роки тому +2

      @@JohnPaul-ej8mm correction, World War 3

    • @thecube0293
      @thecube0293 3 роки тому +6

      @@muhdnoor09 responding to aocmment from 6 years ago lolz

    • @wadewilson8011
      @wadewilson8011 2 роки тому +2

      November Oscar, Yankee Oscar Uniform' Romeo Echo November Oscar Tango.
      -• ---, -•-- --- ••-' •-• • -• --- -.

  • @app4902
    @app4902 5 років тому +11

    And Romeo couldn’t care less. Lmao

  • @xD-ui5mt
    @xD-ui5mt 2 роки тому +4

    This is absolute golden! a true forgotten art :'D

  • @jasonmintzchannel8902
    @jasonmintzchannel8902 4 роки тому +3

    2:51 I like how they use the letter H to explain what it sounds like

  • @lgrantcdg
    @lgrantcdg 2 роки тому +1

    I like the pairing of letters with situations, like the soldier changing step. When I was learning the code, I used mnemonics for just a few trouble spots. For example, I had trouble with F and L. I remembered the F had the same rhythm as "Get a hair cut", and L had the same rhythm as "The L with it". (And the L in the second one helped me remember which of the two was for L.) And the low planes versus enemy planes is great for demonstrating the importance of spacing.

  • @lemonmazter7831
    @lemonmazter7831 3 роки тому +2

    This is surprisingly well made for its time

  • @scatt57
    @scatt57 11 років тому +2

    It led to a lot of deciphering and me looking totally incompetent...after a while, you learn the operator. And I still looked incompetent!

  • @jagadeeshakanihal
    @jagadeeshakanihal 9 років тому +3

    best video for starting with Morse code

  • @WilliamAshleyG
    @WilliamAshleyG 11 років тому +3

    best morse training media yet.

  • @STomo30
    @STomo30 11 років тому +41

    I'm drunk... aaaand I'm learning morse....

  • @N6MKC
    @N6MKC 12 років тому +6

    Did anybody happen to notice the shorting-bar was engaged on the key at 0:37? The guy shown in the footage wasn't sending the code.

  • @jeremyminecraft3130
    @jeremyminecraft3130 2 роки тому

    3:00 This is NBC, the National Broadcasting Company. WNBT New York.

  • @DocPicklez
    @DocPicklez 9 років тому +41

    This is how we will beat the Aliens after Will Smith lowers the shield.

    • @MrSpruce
      @MrSpruce 5 років тому +5

      This comment aged excellently

    • @GMC997
      @GMC997 2 роки тому

      @@MrSpruce This comment aged even more excellently. But no he will not lower the shield, he will raise his hand.

  • @eogg25
    @eogg25 14 років тому +1

    i was an army CW radio operator but was trained on the job. the film probably was made after 1957, i dont beleive they started issuing the green uniform till 58, because i didnt have to get one.yup and the shorting bar was closed. i also used lower case letters while copying they are easier to write. my typing speed was to slow for typing messages. enjoyed the film

  • @timelord1137
    @timelord1137 3 роки тому +2

    Old training videos serve only one purpose - to make you understand. Nothing superfluous and straight to the point.

  • @stonefox9124
    @stonefox9124 2 роки тому

    And that's how Patton won WWII... "It was gargled in transmission, ask to resend, delay for about 2 days"

  • @JoelSCollier
    @JoelSCollier 13 років тому +2

    This is FAAABULOus!! Charming but also USEFUL!!

  • @jeffhuys
    @jeffhuys 13 років тому +7

    Haha, "He used the shortest codes for the letters we most use" And then he shows "ET"...

  • @Richard-f7q
    @Richard-f7q 7 місяців тому

    The operator at the beginning has excellent sending.

  • @20351MA
    @20351MA 15 років тому

    Boy does this ever take me back.

  • @Schoko98
    @Schoko98 13 років тому +5

    Thanks for the video. When I was trying to learn morse code, I had difficulty. I found this sweet app on the android market that helps a ton. It's called Morse Code Trainer and its free to use forever. I recommend it to anyone trying to learn.

  • @davidmcbeth5736
    @davidmcbeth5736 11 років тому +3

    what about sending stuff in code and not plain text? must have been a very fun job that took a lot of practice

  • @rainman1099
    @rainman1099 14 років тому +1

    Went through ROC at Ft Ord, CA in 1966, probably saw this training film. I could rc 15 GPM and tx 17 GPM after graduation. I went on to RTTY school at Ft Gordon, GA.. So, I was an 05B/05C. But when I got to RVN I worked 72B land line TTY. Now I can hardly copy the alphabet at 2 GPM. I am not an operator anymore.

  • @aqzae
    @aqzae 2 роки тому

    still relevant for a radio operator conscript today

  • @GrapevineTom
    @GrapevineTom Рік тому

    This seems to be from the 1966 US Army Training Film TF11 3697, vs WWII. Even so, it's an interesting video to see how the US troops were trained! I'm guessing there are similar films from WWII as well. Thanks for posting!

  • @mirror318808ify
    @mirror318808ify 3 роки тому

    Think rhythmically, dits all same dahs all same. Spaces all same. Distinctive beat. Think phonetically. Most common e,t shortest. Low vs enemy spacing really imp. Sorry in trying to learn. Thanks for the vid! It helped a bunch

  • @davidbeal8054
    @davidbeal8054 2 роки тому

    If you think about it, teaching morse code is a lot like teaching tap-dancing or the mastering of drum rudiments in the context of drum notation. If you can play a drum solo on just a snare drum, you can learn morse code. this was interesting

  • @bunshin99
    @bunshin99 11 років тому +18

    It's amazing how you get lost in to the most random ass videos when you've had a couple of beers -··

  • @erv90
    @erv90 11 років тому +3

    Wet rain, you don't say, I didn't know we had dry rain

    • @Galiuros
      @Galiuros 3 роки тому

      It's called Virga.

  • @TazManiac008
    @TazManiac008 12 років тому +1

    spaces between words are equal to 7 dits
    spaces between letters are equal to 3 dits

  • @AlloysiustheSlayer
    @AlloysiustheSlayer 11 років тому +2

    Not a single fuck was given by Romeo

  • @NotTheBot
    @NotTheBot 2 місяці тому

    “Rhythm is indeed, the key, to good sending.” “.. . .., .., . . ..”

  • @wolfgangamadeusmozart8772
    @wolfgangamadeusmozart8772 7 років тому +1

    The analogies just made it harder, although I think complaints are a bit late.

  • @russshaw2087
    @russshaw2087 3 роки тому +3

    This is really good

  • @VO1HAX
    @VO1HAX 14 років тому +1

    @eogg25 Glad to hear you are still active in CW! My straight key speed maxes out just under 20WPM at it's best (not sure about paddles, I don't have any).
    I have to fix my radio and then put some antennas back up. I'll have to look for you!
    73

  • @ok4rm
    @ok4rm 2 роки тому +1

    Except that choosing the character length according its to frequency in common text was no invention of Samuel Morse. His original code was numeric, consisting of sequences of dots. The code we use today was actually invented by Alfred Vail, Morse's assistant. Give credit where it is due and to whom it is due.

  • @kalilott1698
    @kalilott1698 12 років тому +3

    I could literally dance to morse code... :P

  • @JohnSmiffer
    @JohnSmiffer 2 роки тому

    "Juliet is some angry broad"

  • @kanjeeiy4135
    @kanjeeiy4135 4 роки тому +2

    Man made the exact first day of the first year I spent on earth 😭 man I want them days to come back ❤️👶🏼

  • @dreamingWisdom
    @dreamingWisdom 11 років тому +3

    What does that say on the paper in the first quarter of the video that the guy is transmitting?
    "It don't mean a thing if you ___ get that swing ___________"

  • @TheZeke1974
    @TheZeke1974 14 років тому +2

    good stuff. Reminds me of the Code Quick i used to pass my general.

  • @Wa3ypx
    @Wa3ypx 12 років тому +4

    What was the WPM of that sarge's fist? I always remember Q as pay day today!

  • @robj1646
    @robj1646 11 років тому +3

    The SOS at 3:24 is incorrect. There should be 1 dit pauses between the letters S (dit-dit-dit) O (dah-dah-dah) and S (dit-dit-dit).

  • @trenchcoatjoe1891
    @trenchcoatjoe1891 3 роки тому

    Some of the metaphors make it seem like a Monty Python bit

  • @AiisakaTaiiga
    @AiisakaTaiiga 22 дні тому

    I learned more about morse from a dead man than any live teacher

  • @1256778
    @1256778 2 роки тому

    4:01
    "one lonely dib"
    Totally feel that... 😢😢

  • @00WhiteBlade
    @00WhiteBlade 11 років тому +2

    How glorious the army must have been back then. No confusion with who the good guys are and who the bad guys are. No holding umbrellas and abandoning brave soldiers. The army was a noble thing. I want to fight for what I love, and I can't anymore because the fight is for something I don't love.

  • @ruthie_chie
    @ruthie_chie 3 місяці тому

    1:20 INSTRUCTIONS START HERE 😊

  • @PD2DXN
    @PD2DXN 12 років тому +1

    sadly not with the letters, but there is a logic with the numbers

  • @aj1986917
    @aj1986917 13 років тому +2

    O jesus, Hotel made me laugh

  • @thorn9382
    @thorn9382 3 роки тому +1

    Why does every old video recording start up like a loony toons intro

  • @IamIronWolf
    @IamIronWolf 11 років тому +1

    LOL, we didn't see this video at Ft. Devens back in 83/84. Just those danged old keyboards and the computer sending. Yeah, I was an O5H trainee.

    • @Galiuros
      @Galiuros 3 роки тому

      We would hear 05H trainees yell out "Dit Dah - Alpha" in their sleep.

  • @VO1HAX
    @VO1HAX 14 років тому +1

    @eogg25 I believe you are correct because the beginning of the video shows the date at the bottom as MCMLXVI, which is 1966.
    Are you still an active CW operator or are you still able to copy at a decent speed? I need to get working on my copying speed again.

  • @OGLanzo2
    @OGLanzo2 3 роки тому

    Bro these memes are beyond their time

  • @ethomunusllc4792
    @ethomunusllc4792 Рік тому

    How do you control the amount of morse code a reciever gets at any given time?

  • @ThrilloVanHouten
    @ThrilloVanHouten 14 років тому +1

    Wish I saw this when I was forced to learn Morse code, it would have really helped out :-/

  • @BS_VIC
    @BS_VIC 2 роки тому

    0:40 and here I was thinking he'd drop a sick Mario morse

  • @eogg25
    @eogg25 14 років тому

    @VO1HAX yes, i am an active ham and use only CW. copy speed is not as fast as it used to be but copy 20 and still can send at much higher speed using my j45 leg key. hang out around 7040 and 7058 . hpe cu 73

  • @happymarconi
    @happymarconi 2 роки тому

    Great teaching method indeed..👍

  • @almohvn33
    @almohvn33 3 роки тому

    I BOUHT MY SF SGM VIETNAM VET THIS BOOK ON EBAY.. HE LOVEEDDDD IT. thanks for the video!!!!

  • @Radninja88
    @Radninja88 12 років тому +1

    The Hell With It is lima. :p Takes forever to listen correctly.

  • @ch11ew12y
    @ch11ew12y 4 роки тому

    I was 05C radio teletype como in Germany. I was fast at morse probably because I was a musician like a lot of the other guys in my unit. I hear a lot of fake code on tv, it's nice to her real sending even if I can't keep up. Bet ya I could catch up quick tho

    • @Galiuros
      @Galiuros 3 роки тому

      I worked with a lot of 05H guys in Germany. We (and themselves) called them ditty-bops. I was a 98C.

  • @ruckboger
    @ruckboger Рік тому

    I was expecting Bugs Bunny to pop out of the Warner Brothers logo

  • @clickres5872
    @clickres5872 3 роки тому +2

    romeo is a sigma male

  • @ObiTrev
    @ObiTrev 3 роки тому +7

    When you have to go to old army training videos to learn, the current method of teaching has failed.

    • @glitch1182
      @glitch1182 3 роки тому +1

      The first mistake contemporary researchers did in trying to improve training videos was the assumption that the learner must be appeased and eased into a topic, that most people lack the attention span for straightforward material like this, and this idea that learning must be intertwined with "fun" elements in order to captivate viewers and an audience. This is all bullshit. People are capable of learning if so desired, we're able to pay attention when we want, and if we want to have fun, we either watch old training videos when not spending long hours giving briefs, or we go bar hopping when on leave after training for weeks as Army SIGINT guys.
      Then it becomes evident: learning isn't meant to improve, the masses are meant to be dumbed down, and the last card this shadowy government will play is the extraterrestrial threat card in the form of a hoax alien invasion. Don't be fooled, if they wanted to harm us they could have done so a long time ago. The tech it takes to get here from there, if weaponized, could destroy matter on planetary scales.

    • @ObiTrev
      @ObiTrev 3 роки тому

      @@glitch1182 Two spaces after the period? Somebody is showing their age.

  • @aurktman1106
    @aurktman1106 4 роки тому

    I’m assuming this film was made at Fort Huachuca, AZ.

    • @scotthedberg
      @scotthedberg  4 роки тому +1

      I would guess Fort Monmouth, NJ which was the primary center of the Signal Corps when this film was made (1966). They didn't move to Fort Gordon (fully) until 1974. During the mid-60s, I don't think they were doing much Morse at Huachuca. Morse intercept operators were trained at Fort Devens.

    • @aurktman1106
      @aurktman1106 4 роки тому +1

      @@scotthedberg I forgot it started at Devens when it was consolidated and didn't move to Huachuca until 93 when Devens closed up.

    • @Galiuros
      @Galiuros 3 роки тому +1

      I was at Ft. Huachuca from 1977 to 1980. In Augsburg before that from 1974 to 1977 as a 98C. My seven years in ASA was a great experience.

  • @TheZeke1974
    @TheZeke1974 14 років тому

    @macdjerf I think Code Qucik is still being made. Just google code quick and it will bring it up. I also leanred by using some old 1970s Novice CW tapes.

  • @sleeve8651
    @sleeve8651 4 роки тому +1

    Was given an old J - 38 by a friend, Jerry Smith, WA9VPR,
    now silent key (SK), not long after getting my Amateur Radio ticket back in 1980 !
    He said they called them,
    " Spit fire's ", because of how fast you could send with them !
    Boy was he right !
    Used that key up until a few months ago, when I wanted to go faster, and switched to the " Atomic " version of the J - 38, with of all things, a Russian crafted iambic key, and more recently a Vibraplex iambic !
    Sad to see technology overshadow the first true binary code !
    The " Off " and " On " , that Morse provided !
    Sad too, that man's lazy nature, got in the way of many claiming they couldn't learn Morse Code !
    IMHO, They don't know what they're missing !
    '73 😉👍
    GOD BLESS

  • @guilty_mulburry5903
    @guilty_mulburry5903 5 років тому +1

    It's funny how this video isn't 10:00 long

  • @BARMN89
    @BARMN89 11 років тому +1

    wait... so they have movies, which probably meant they had radios...

  • @archismandas7760
    @archismandas7760 2 роки тому

    I learned most of the symbols somehow in one day but trying to interpret the message from the sound is hard
    Does anyone have any tips to learn them ?

  • @clementesantiago4464
    @clementesantiago4464 2 роки тому

    Dude this is a banger

  • @GarySchiltz
    @GarySchiltz 3 місяці тому

    That was a hoot!

  • @scatt57
    @scatt57 12 років тому +1

    Yep, served my time in Korea/San Antonio

    • @Galiuros
      @Galiuros 3 роки тому

      I did Augsburg and Huachuca.

  • @mrgamer90001
    @mrgamer90001 12 років тому +2

    and that kids is what email looked like in the army in the wars

  • @macdjerf7763
    @macdjerf7763 14 років тому

    @TheZeke1974 Many thank´s Zeke. :o)
    I´m going to look for the sites on the double.
    Do you have any advice on what practice software or equipment to look for?

  • @fordprius
    @fordprius 11 років тому +1

    I have learned a lot

  • @chasiu75
    @chasiu75 2 роки тому

    My Dad's tax dollars at work.

  • @robj1646
    @robj1646 7 років тому +2

    3:23 The rhythm for SOS is terribly wrong! It is sent as one non-existing letter. There should be more space between the letters.

    • @masegado
      @masegado 5 років тому +3

      I recently learned that "SOS" is actually treated a prosign rather than as three separate letters, so it is in fact correct to send it as "di-di-di-dah-dah-dah-di-di-dit" with no spacing! (Wasn't covered in this video, though...)

    • @pancito3108
      @pancito3108 6 днів тому

      if you look up prosugns and abbreviations you'll see that many have a bar above written above them, which means you have to send it with no spacing between the letters

  • @iamdividing
    @iamdividing 11 років тому

    And that's David Guetta's music !

  • @xNAILEDxITx
    @xNAILEDxITx 11 років тому +1

    Just wondering doesnt this lead to alot of miscommunication?
    Like pointed out at 7:24

  • @Toft-b8x
    @Toft-b8x 13 років тому +3

    Симпатичный ролик! И хватка у оператора вполне профессиональная.
    Видимо, это отрывок из учебного фильма.

  • @radioemergencias
    @radioemergencias 13 років тому +1

    fantastic!!!