Signals

Welcome to the command center for Morse Code signals — the short patterns that act like “control words” in live communication. If letters and numbers are the alphabet, signals are the operating system.

This hub covers the most common procedural signals used in Morse code, especially in radio and CW contexts. Click any signal to get meaning, timing, usage examples, and common mistakes.

Common Morse Code Signals

SignalPatternMeaningLearn More
SOS… — …Distress / emergency call for helpSOS in Morse Code →
AR.-.-.End of message (new line / end of transmission block)AR in Morse Code →
SK…-.-End of contact (final sign-off)SK in Morse Code →
KN-.–.Go only / specific station invited to transmitKN in Morse Code →

Signals vs Letters: What’s the Difference?

Signals like SOS, AR, SK, and KN are not “spelled like normal words” during operation. They are sent as procedural signals, meaning they are transmitted as a single unit with normal intra-character spacing (tight), then separated from surrounding text with the standard character gap.

Timing Rules (Quick Reference)

ActionTiming
Dot1 time unit
Dash3 time units
Gap inside one character1 unit
Gap between characters3 units
Gap between words7 units

Quick Practice

Start with AR and SK first. They teach you spacing discipline. Then learn KN for turn-taking, and keep SOS as the one signal you should never mis-send.


Practice This in Real Time

Reading is great, but practice locks it in.

  • Translate: text input, Morse code input, or voice input.
  • Learn: patterns with instant feedback while you type.
  • Train: timing and speed (WPM) to decode faster.

Quick drills:

  • Type the letter into the tool and verify the dot/dash output instantly.
  • Paste text with many repeats and “hunt” the pattern in the Morse output.
  • Listen to Morse audio and focus on the rhythm shape (short/long order).