ΑΡΧΙΚΗ

 

 
 
 

- Morse Code -
 

Letter

Morse

 

Letter

Morse

 

Letter

Morse

 

Letter

Morse

 

Digit

Morse

A

.-

 

H

....

 

O

---

 

U

..-

 

0

-----

B

-...

 

I

..

 

P

.--.

 

V

...-

 

1

.----

C

-.-.

 

J

.---

 

Q

--.-

 

W

.--

 

2

..---

D

-..

 

K

-.-

 

R

.-.

 

X

-..-

 

3

...--

E

.

 

L

.-..

 

S

...

 

Y

-.--

 

4

....-

F

..-.

 

M

--

 

T

-

 

Z

--..

 

5

.....

G

--.

 

N

-.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6

-....

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

7

--...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

8

---..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9

----.

 

Letter

Morse

 

Punctuation Mark

Morse

 Note:

A dash (-) is three times
the length of a dot (.)

Ä

.-.-

 

Full-stop (.)

.-.-.-

Á

.--.-

 

Comma (,)

--..--

Å

.--.-

 

Colon (:)

---...

Ch

----

 

Question mark (?)

..--..

É

..-..

 

Apostrophe (')

.----.

Ñ

--.--

 

Hyphen (-)

-....-

Ö

---.

 

Fraction bar (/)

-..-.

Ü

..--

 

Brackets (())

-.--.-

 

Quotation marks (")

.-..-.

Mistake, delete last word:  . . . . . . . .

 

 

 

MORSE SOUND APPLET

 

The international phonetic alphabet

 

A - Alpha B - Bravo C - Charlie D - Delta E - Echo

F - Foxtrot G - Golf H - Hotel I - India J - Juliet

K - Kilo L - Lima M - Mike N - November O - October

P - Papa Q - Quebec R - Romeo S - Sierra T - Tango

U - Uniform V - Victor W - Whiskey X - X-Ray

Y - Yankee Z - Zulu

 

AA     all after
AB     all before
ABT   about
AGN  again
ANT  antenna
BCI    broadcast interference
BCNU           be seeing you
CK    check
CL     closing down
CPI    copy
CQ    calling all stations
CUD  could
CUL  see you later
DE     this is; from
DX     distant foreign countries
ES      and
FB     fine; excellent
GB     goodbye
GE     good evening
GM    good morning
GN    good night
GUD  good
HI      high
HI HI the CW laugh
HR     here
HW    how is
NR     near; number
NW   now
OC    old chap
OM    old man
OP     operator
OT     old timer
PSE   please
PWR  power
RX     receiver
RFI    radio frequency interference
RIG    equipment
RPT   repeat
SRI    sorry
TNX  thanks
TKS   thanks
TVI    television interference
UR     your
VY     very
WKD worked
TX     transmitter
XTAL            crystal
XYL  wife
YL     young lady
73      best regards
88      love and kisses 

 

Common Frequency Information


This information section is common and useful frequency information for many different bands utilized in daily activity. It is data extracted from the FCC's public domain information. The information is provided as an effort to assist in usage of these devices, and to assist in identification in possible RFI (radio frequency interference) problems. You may also find useful information on one of our telephone frequency pages, 49 Mhz Cordless Phone Frequency Table and 900 Mhz Cordless Phone Frequency Information.

 

AM radio - 530 kilohertz to 1.6 megahertz

Short wave radio - bands from 2.3 megahertz to 26.1 megahertz

Citizens band (CB) radio - 26.96 megahertz to 27.41 megahertz

Television stations - 54 to 88 megahertz for channels 2 through 6

FM radio - 88 megahertz to 108 megahertz

Television stations - 174 to 220 megahertz for channels 7 through 13

Garage door openers, alarm systems, etc. - Older around 40 megahertz

Standard cordless phones: Bands from 40 to 50 megahertz (Older)

Baby monitors: 49 megahertz

Radio controlled airplanes: Around 72 megahertz

Radio controlled cars: Around 75 megahertz

Wildlife tracking collars: 215 to 220 megahertz

MIR space station: 145 megahertz and 437 megahertz

Cell phones: 824 to 849 megahertz

900-MHz cordless phones: 900 megahertz selected

2.1-GHz cordless phones: 2.1 gigahertz selected

Air traffic control radar: 960 to 1,215 megahertz

Global Positioning System: 1,227 and 1,575 megahertz

Deep space radio communications: 2290 megahertz to 2300 megahertz

 

SUPER ELECTRONICS GR

© 2004-05