My favorite links

These links are ones I enjoy using. Your mileage may vary. There is some overlap, of course. I am a CW nut so my preferences lean in that direction. There are hundreds of great sites.. A few are so useful there is really no need to dig further. This list will more than get you started. If I left out one that you feel is a good one to highlight, drop me a note in the blog section (see navigation at top of page). I keep finding more and more great sites that do what I do here, with much better organization.

RESOURCE DIRECTORY
http://www.radiotelegraphy.net/
With this, frankly, you don't need many of the others I list.

HUNDREDS OF SITES RE RADIO
www.dxzone.com

MY FAVORITE RESOURCE DIRECTORY
www.ac6v.com/morseaids.htm

QRZ CALLSIGN LOOKUP
www.qrz.com/db/?cmd=1

QRZ - THE WHOLE NINE YARDS
www.qrz.com/site.html

One of my favorite sites - be sure to sign up for their newsletter !
www.k9ya.org

And another one (I’m FISTS #1293)
www.fists.org

For old timers (25 years licensed, or more - I’m QCWA # 8888)
www.qcwa.org

John Shannon's CW/QRP website, with links
http://home.windstream.net/johnshan/

North American QRP CW Club
http://home.windstream.net/yoel

For the ladies
www.ylrl.org

great list of CW links
( just go to the Morse Code link at lower left)
http://www.qsl.net/n9bor/

ARRL Public Service Communications Manual... online. 
www.arrl.org/FandES/field/pscm/sec2-ch1.html

Another neat site
http://cw.hfradio.org

eHam - online ham site - no need to pay but it could use a few bucks annually
www.eham.net

Wiki site re Morse Code
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_code

Ham radio history site
http://www.ac6v.com/history.htm

All about telegraph keys and devices
http://www.telegraph-office.com/tel_off-page.html

The Art and Skill of Radiotelegraphy, by William Pierpont N0HFF
 I worked on editing and finalizing this document prior to publication.
http://www.qsl.net/n9bor/n0hff.htm
No longer available on paper. You can download it, save it and/or print it.. no charge.

HAM RADIO DAILY
This one is new to me... it seems to really keep up on ham radio news
http://www.hamradiodaily.com/545_general-news.html?ham-radio-daily,1

Our biggest local ham club, 30 miles east, in Syracuse, NY
http://www.ragsinreview.com/


A Beginner's Guide to Making CW Contacts
http://www.netwalk.com/~fsv/CWguide.htm#Slow%20Speed%20CW%20Traffic

Simple, neat Morse code practice reader
http://morsecode.scphillips.com/jtranslator.html