Lockdown? Wythall Radio Club still busy!
Wythall Radio Club has moved in to ‘virtual’ mode during lockdown!
Members keep in touch ‘on the air’ – on our Club 2M channel and via our GB3WL 70cm repeater.
The Club’s Easter Contest was very popular, with over 40 members participating. And the results were shared via Zoom.
We are also using Zoom so that members can give talks and chat about radio activities – last night we had a talk on ‘getting on the air with RTTY’ (radio teletype) with around 20 members participating.
This is all part of the way radio amateurs are connecting people during lockdown, as the BBC reported yesterday.
Club members have also been working on creative projects at home.
Allen 2E0VVG comments: ‘Last week i turned an old laptop mouse into a morse key.
Yesterday I decided to build a frame for my 817, LDG tuner and battery for when I can finally get back out on the hills (see photo above).
And as I’m seriously restricted on where I can put my shack, I build a shelf to go above the unit out of left-over copper pipe fittings and an off-cut of wood.’
Meanwhile Kev 2E0NCO decided to rebuild his shack! (photo right)
Maybe woodworking and DIY should be part of the Licence exams?



John continued with the morse class, and by his own admission found it quite tough going and requiring lots of practice at home and at the club. He said that one Friday night at the club shack with Phil 2E0WTH and others, he heard Barry M0DGQ calling CQ on 80 metres without any station replying to him, so he very cautiously replied. This was his very first ever CW contact. 
He entered almost all of the club contests, often sticking to CW only, but was also to be often found on FM for a local natter. He also embraced DSTAR and recorded his activity on the Club’s ‘check-in’ website.
At Wythall Radio Club during May we celebrate the skill of communicating by Morse Code in honour of Lew Williams, who was an expert at Morse and former Club President.




Wythall Radio Club members gathered on Zoom last night to hear the results of the annual Easter Contest.

modes section. David G7IBO came first with 124 QSOs with 43 Club members over the five days, and a total score of 3655 points. He will be awarded the David Dawkes G0ICJ Easter Contest all bands/mode section Shield, in memory of our former Club member.
Tim M6OTN, based in Worcester, won the award for the highest placed Foundation licencee in this all mode/band section.
bike!
The G6ZDQ and G0ICJ shields will be presented when Club members are once again able to meet again face-to-face.


The multi-winding coil was by far the most difficult to assemble but inductance measurements proved each winding before fixing into position (photo left).
This module is only available in kit form and interfaces to the QCX via a 4 core umbilical cord.
Gregg (seen with a Chinook salmon!) approached our Club, but it wasn’t a callsign we had used. 
Wythall Radio Club members participated in this year’s 
Amateur Radio experimenters were the first to discover that the short wave spectrum — far from being a wasteland — could support worldwide propagation. 

Using the 40 meter short wave band, Tim M6OTN and Chris G0EYO both made their first two-way contacts with Norman – call sign 

