Morse Code Chatroom

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telegraph.cee.wtf // dit-dah chatroom

station<br>connecting<br>ops on wire: —

·–

space · click · tap — hold for dash · stop tapping to send

dot

120ms

auto-send

3s

vol

40

tone

wire audio

clear<br>send now

morse cheat sheet

· dot ≈ short tap · – dash ≈ ~3× a dot ·<br>letter gap ≈ 3 dots · word gap ≈ 5+ dots

tips & tricks

Think in rhythm. Say "di-dit" for I, "dah-di-dah-dit" for C — internalizing the sound pattern is faster than mapping each symbol back to a dot or dash.

Mind the gaps. Pause too long between dits of one letter and you've split it: C (−·−·) becomes NN (−· −·). Letter gap ≈ 3 dots; word gap ≈ 5–7.

Standard ratios. Dash = 3 dots · intra-letter gap = 1 dot · letter gap = 3 dots · word gap = 7 dots. Consistency matters more than raw speed.

Speed comes from the dot. Every other timing is a multiple of your dot length. To send faster, shrink the unit — don't rush the gaps.

No backspace. Operators on a real wire couldn't take a tap back, so the convention is to keep going. If a word's garbled, send it twice. Readers parse around mistakes.

Old codes still work. 73 = best regards · 88 = love · OM = any operator · YL = young lady · CQ = calling anyone · QSL = I confirm · QRT = signing off.

Skip punctuation. A period is six signals (·−·−·−). Most operators don't bother — context carries.

dots send letter dash word wire

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