Telegraph Code and Signals




SEPT. 1.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 2175

83

1 — — — — —
2 — — — — —
3 — — — — —
4 — — — — —
5 — — — — —

6 — — — — —
7 — — — — —
8 — — — — —
9 — — — — —
0 — — — — —

The following code may be used for figures in repetitions only :—

1 — —
2 — — —
3 — — — —
4 — — — — —
5 — — — — —

7 — — — —
8 — — —
9 — —
0 —

Bar — —

PUNCTUATION.

Full-stop — — — — —
Comma — — — — —
Note of interrogation [?] — — — — —
Note of exclamation [!] — — — — —
Apostrophe [’] — — — — —
Underline — — — — —
Parenthesis [( )] — — — — —
Hyphen — — — — —
Inverted commas [“ ”] — — — — —
New line — — — — —
Roman numerals — — — — —
Bar of division or shilling-mark
(oblique stroke, as in (2/3)) — — — — —
Bar of division or fraction-mark
(horizontal stroke, as in ⅔) — — — — —

NOTE.—The signals marked * are sent before and after the words so marked. The underline is counted as one word; the parenthesis and inverted commas as two words; Roman numerals as three words.

RULES FOR SPACING.

The length of a dot being taken as unit,---
A dash is equal in length to two dots.
The space between the elements of a letter is equal to one dot.
The space between letters is equal to one dash.
The space between words is equal to two dashes.

SPECIAL SIGNALS.

Break-signal — — — —
Correction — — — — — — —
End of message — — — — — — —

Understand — — — — —
Wait — — — — —



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1905, No 80





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🚂 Telegraph Alphabet and Code of Signals (continued from previous page)

🚂 Transport & Communications
Telegraph code, Morse code, punctuation signals, spacing rules, special signals, signal transmission