Are the antennae made from pork products? What’s the deal?
The National Association for Amatuer Radio web site ARRL.org explanation if you like.
I’m a ham radio operator. The exact origin of this term is unclear. The one thing that we do know for sure is “ham” was being used in wire telegraphy to mean “a lousy telegraphist” even before radio was invented. There is some speculation that the term may have come from the telegraphist having “a fist like a ham.” As opposed to knowing how to send morse properly.
All very early radio was wireless telegraphy. At this point they lacked the technology to do voice modulation. Thus, natural the the term from wired telegraphy would be used to describe lousy amateur radio operators. For whatever reason, early amateur operators started using the term “ham” in a non-derogatory way. (Perhaps some didn’t realize it was an insult?)
[QUOTE=rfgdxm]
I’m a ham radio operator. The exact origin of this term is unclear. The one thing that we do know for sure is “ham” was being used in wire telegraphy to mean “a lousy telegraphist” even before radio was invented. There is some speculation that the term may have come from the telegraphist having “a fist like a ham.” As opposed to knowing how to seon-derogatory way. (Perhaps some didn’t realize it was an insult?)[
The pre-ww2 Navy Signals were known as “Z-signals”
An operator who ws “ham-handed” referred to someone whose ability was limited to the basic requirement of five words per minute-----and who was visualized as sitting there pounding out letters using a hammer like motion.
As a matter of fact there was a pseudo z signal which was insultingly sent to a ham handed operator which meant “send with your other foot”–it was ZOB 123
In actual usage ZOB123 meant “your characters are indistinct,your characters are poorly spaced,send slower for clarity”.
EZ
It took my mother-in-law a while to figure out that hamfests weren’t about worshipping pork products, but mini-conventions/flea markets for the amateur radio community. Now, you should ask about the Wouff-Hong, or the Rettysnitch…
Vlad/Igor
KF4VCC
I recently read Made in America by Bill Bryson, a book about the development of the English language in America. Here’s what he has to say:
(He doesn’t cite a source for this particular claim)