Morse Code requires less transmitter power and/or a less sensitive receiver to successfully send a given signal over a given path both of which can be an advantage, for example in mobile communications. Conversely, for the same transmitter power and receiver sensitivity, a Morse Code signal may be sent successively over a longer distance or under noisier conditions, for example when "Jamming" is in use. Finally, with the technology available in WWII it was much easier to send encrypted messages with Morse Code, since voice scramblers and computers were generally unavailable. That is, all that was necessary was to encode a text message with some encryption scheme, often by hand, and send the encrypted characters otherwise "in the clear" by Morse Code.
Morse Code
In 1844
Because the enemy didn't know it.
Roughly the same way it was used at the time the Titanic sunk a few years earlier.
There was no war occurring when Morse invented Morse Code. The closest chronological war would have been the Civil War which occurred about twenty years later.
Samuel Morse had made a faster and efficient way to communicate to one another. The Morse code was used by the single-wire telegraph (which Samuel Morse had made, developed from the classical telegraph).The Morse code was helpful during the Civil War. That was the time in which the Morse code had become the most famous.-HD
The first word war
Morse code was used in the 1800s. It wasn't until the late 1800s that Morse code began to be used through radio communication.
An Arc 5 is a set of two way radios which is used by the Navy. It is used to send and receive Morse code signals. They were used quite often during World War II.
He was a signals and language expert. He knew and used everything from Morse code to flag symbols
I believe you are referring to the Navajo Code Talkers. The Navajos were recruited to use their language to speak in code and sent Morse code in the Navajo Code. The Japanese could not recognize the language.
it says and im not joking "suck my bullets or ill shoot you"