![]() The whole idea of a unit which duly trots out a decoded Morse transmission would be a massive help in my learning, but what to do in the absence of the “Holy Grail?” Using a PC is one option but it’s not that portable, buy a cheap Chinese unit from eBay or adapt and overcome. OK, option one is learn Morse, but Rome wasn’t built in a day and a little help on that journey would be a good thing. So after I recovered from smacking my balding head against a wall and making noises akin to Father Jack from Father Ted, I tried to work out what to do. Somewhat ironic that the bloody thing is now discontinued! If ever my sense of timing was well and truly out, this is one of them! Now Morse code is starting to feature in my radio interest a Cumbria Designs Microcode Morse Reader would be a really useful piece of kit to have. It really is a case of “chicken and egg” on this one as if I’d have bought it and built it, it would have been a case of “well done but what are you going to do with it?” so it’s been on the back burner as an idea for almost 3 years. By chance I plumped for a Stellar WSPR decoder as per blog post #1, but in amongst those search results was the Cumbria Designs Microcode Morse Reader which eHams rate as top notch. When all this interest in radio started a few years ago I remember putting something similar to “amateur radio project kit” into Google in the hope of finding something to build which would teach me a few things.
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