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MFJ CW Gear · Volume 1

MFJ CW Gear — Vol 1: Introduction

MFJ-419 CW Elmer + MFJ-422D Electronic Keyer Paddle — what each instrument is

Figure 1 — MFJ-419/MFJ-422D CW gear — iambic keyer paddle and CW practice instruments (representative; a Morse-code iambic paddle shown). Photo: "NB6M Morse Code Paddles" by JCHaywire, CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://c…
Figure 1 — MFJ-419/MFJ-422D CW gear — iambic keyer paddle and CW practice instruments (representative; a Morse-code iambic paddle shown). Photo: "NB6M Morse Code Paddles" by JCHaywire, CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/), via Openverse.

1.1 About this volume

Two instruments share this volume — both MFJ Enterprises pocket-class CW training and sending gear. The MFJ-419 CW Elmer is a receive-side learning aid (random code groups, Farnsworth method, USB text mode); the MFJ-422D Electronic Keyer Paddle is a send-side iambic-keyer-plus-paddle combo that plugs into any HF rig’s key jack. Neither transmits, receives, or talks to a hotspot. They sit in the radio drawer until practice or operating time — the radios are the subjects; these two are the training and operating tools for CW.

The cross-links from this volume run to the radios these instruments support: Vol 9 (Xiegu X6100) for the HF rig the MFJ-422D drives; Vol 25 (closeout) for the laminate-ready bench-instrument quick-reference card.

The bench instruments that used to share this volume — the Gigatronics 6060A signal generator and the Radio City Products 665 VTVM — now live in the Test Equipment collection: Gigatronics 6060A and RCP 665 VTVM.

1.2 MFJ-419 CW Elmer (Morse code practice generator)

The MFJ-419 is a dedicated Morse-code training appliance — no transmitter, no receiver, no antenna, no radio in the loop. The whole point is to take the radio out of the practice loop and give the operator a focused environment for learning to receive, send, and analyze Morse code with neither the spectrum-management problems of going on-air to practice nor the embarrassment of fumbling code in front of other operators. It is the practice-room piano for CW.

1.2.1 What it is, and what it isn’t

The MFJ-419 is a pocket-sized desktop unit — roughly 5 × 3 × 1.5 inches — with a built-in 2 × 16-character LCD, an internal speaker, a headphone jack, a touch-sensitive internal key, an external key jack for a separate straight key or paddle, and a Micro-USB-B connector that serves both as a power input and as a serial port. Power can come from a single 9 V alkaline battery (NEDA 1604A) or from any USB source (computer port, USB-C-to-USB-A power bank, mains adapter); when both are connected, USB takes precedence and the battery is disconnected.

What it isn’t: a transmitter (no RF anywhere in the box), a CW decoder for over-the-air signals (it doesn’t tune anything — it just plays code at you), or a substitute for the MFJ-422D (the 422D plugs into a real HF rig and sends real CW; the 419 only generates audio and decodes the touch-key in software). The 419 and the 422D are complementary, not redundant.

1.3 MFJ-422D Electronic Keyer Paddle

The MFJ-422D is an iambic electronic keyer with a dual-paddle integrated — a microcontroller-based keyer driving its own pair of paddle contacts, all in one small enclosure. Where the MFJ-419 is the practice tool with no radio in the loop, the 422D is the operating tool with a radio in the loop: it plugs into an HF rig’s key input and lets the operator send real CW on the air.