Ragchew Dec/Jan 2012

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Ben 2E0BSF Update Members Profiles Band Reports WADARC Awards & more .....

December - January


Worthing & District Amateur Radio Club Established 1948

http://www.wadarc.org.uk - email info@wadarc.org.uk President: G8FMJ John Slater

Life Vice President: G8MSQ Peter Robinson

WADARC meet alternate Wednesdays, 8pm in the Lancing Parish Hall, South Street, Lancing BN15 8AJ. All that have an interest in radio communications and associate subjects, whether a licensed amateur or not, are invited. WADARC can also arrange training for people to undertake the Radio Amateur Foundation, Intermediate & Advanced licenses. WADARC Committee 2011 - 2012 Kelvan! ! Rod! ! Sandra ! ! John ! ! Richard! ! Jonathan! Peter! ! Pete! ! Andy! !

M0KEL! ! M0RDV! ! G0KAG! ! G8FMJ! ! G7NLZ! ! G1EXG! ! G4LKW! ! M6PAP! ! M6RFE! !

Chairman! ! Secretary! ! Treasurer! ! President! ! Ordinary Member!! Ordinary Member!! Ordinary Member!! Ordinary Member!! Ordinary Member!!

WADARC Ex Officio 2011 - 2012 John ! Peter! Chris ! Graham Phil! Martin !

! ! ! ! ! !

G8FMJ! ! G8MSQ! ! G3NDJ! ! G4FNL! ! G4UDU! ! M0ADY ! !

Publicity!! ! Membership Manager! Awards Manager! ! Contest Manager!! Ragchew Editor! ! Club Webmaster! !

WADARC Foundation, Intermediate & Advanced Courses & Licensing Kelvan! !

M0KEL! !

Training Officer! !

WADARC Club Nets - all times are local I am currently obtaining new information on club nets. 2m on 145.425 is an often used frequency


Contents From the Editor's Keyboard!

1

Chairman’s Chatter!

1

Presidential Ponderings!

2

WADARC Awards 2011!

3

The Royal Marines Band Service!

4

Member's profile - Ted G3EUE!

14

Job Vacancy!

15

Band Reports!

16

List of WADARC awards!

17

Useful VHF & UHF Websites!

19

Club program, activities and dates for the diary!

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From the Editor's Keyboard To start, the front cover is certainly a different picture to that normally seen on Ragchew - Ben has included a report of his new career in the Marines and it makes interesting reading. I would like to congratulate him on behalf of WADARC on getting through the basic training and he will now start with the music studying, we look forward to further updates. Work has been busy for me so not enough time spent on the radio, conditions have been interesting and I have managed to grab a bit of operating when the chance arises. I was anticipating a chance to operate from Iceland “TF” while over there last week, but the extreme weather they are currently having did not give me the opportunity. Iceland has a “maritime” climate that usually results in very mild winters given the position of the island being just south of the arctic circle, but we had temperatures of 0C to -6C which is fairly typical for January but with winds blowing from the North (yes direct from the North Pole) at gale force so the wind chill was quite interesting plus a recent heavy snowfall that resulted in the drifts being up to 3 metres high this was not ideal for sitting outside with a portable HF radio setup! It was a very interesting country to visit and we certainly will be going back at some time. Articles for Ragchew - this wonderful publication does not exist without input, so if you have anything to report - operating, interesting trips away with a bit of radio involvement or just home radio projects - please send me the details so we can put it in the magazine. Do you have a special interest in amateur radio like ATV or Microwave operation? An article on this is always interesting to HF operators like myself who find our lives constantly below the 30MHz barrier. Please send it to me, by email is the preferred method, or write/type it up and I will scan it in. I would like to include member profiles, details of your route to amateur radio and the equipment you operate with. We start in this issue with details from Ted G3EUE, I will be asking for more from our membership, so please start writing. Phil G4UDU

Chairman’s Chatter Happy new year to you all. This year from January to March the club is trialling meeting 1st and 3rd Wednesdays, so please let me have some feedback. Any member who would like to give a talk please contact me.

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The club has been invited to exhibit at Worthing & District Society of Model Engineers in April, more info to follow; I saw a program for this event dated 1950 and WADARC were exhibiting. Storage, can anyone store the club tent? If you can, please contact me. Hopefully the EMC problem on HF with the alarm at the hall will be sorted. Hope to see you all at club meetings and on the air. 73 Kelvan Gale M0KEL

Presidential Ponderings Well it’s the end of another year for the Worthing club, 63 years since it was founded. I should remember because I am the same age, I know I really don’t look that old but its true, and NO I do not need your comments please. I think we have had a very good year as clubs go. I know many other clubs would love to have the number of members that we have and also the successes we have had in things like SSB field day and the various special event stations we have activated. The support from members on the three events we have provided marshals for this past year, it does say a lot for the members commitment to the club, to get involved in the way you have. Thank you all for your past efforts and let's see if we can get even more members involved in club events in 2012. As a club we have also lost some very good friends in the past year, I don’t want to dwell on this but we will miss these guys a lot… We have also had some major changes for the new year, twice monthly meeting for a start so you will now have to try to remember the 1st and 3rd Wednesdays are club evenings. It will be interesting to see if this does have any effect on numbers at the meetings, time will tell. We have a new committee with members taking on different jobs within that committee. Although I am technically not a committee member, I will attend committee meeting in my role as club president, a position I am very proud to still hold, and I will liaise with the committee as much as possible to keep things running as smoothly as they have in the past. The one thing we all need to do is COMMUNICATE, something which our hobby is all about but something which sometimes seems to be lacking amongst ourselves. I have always tried to emphasise this with my weekly updates on the WADARC reflector and will continue to do so as long as it seems worthwhile. I know that I have said it many times before, it is YOUR club, BUT I do believe that you will get more out of it IF you put something in, maybe a new years resolution to try and get a bit more involved if you possibly can. I will continue to be a bloody nuisance and pester you all at every opportunity so be warned.

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Wishing you all the very best for 2012. 73, John G8FMJ.

WADARC Awards 2011 At the Christmas party the following awards were made DF Hunt award Jointly won by John Houlihan G4BLJ and Martin Grundy M0ADY Every club year there are 10 very simple communication awards anybody can win - if they occasionally switch their radios on! This year there were only 2 logs submitted for the annual HF competition on 17 metres, one from Jonothon Hare G1EXB with 27 countries worked, including a couple of good contacts to Indonesia and Hong Kong. The other was from the winner Ted Jones G3EUE who worked 67 countries. He used a 60ft end fed wire or an ex-CB vertical - 65 of his contacts were on CW and two were on SSB. G4FPM Best Lecture award Terry Baily G0BRP G3FRB Key Awarded to G4JZC for his CW operating G8HY Merit Award Awarded to Edmund Spicer 2E0MDO for his help at events Construction Award Awarded to Chris Smith G3UFS Chairman's Award Awarded to our president John G8FMJ for his help during a difficult year. Awards Manager Chris G3NDJ

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The Royal Marines Band Service It wasn’t long ago that I was sitting at home compiling Ragchew and wondering where to find articles and now I have been asked to write one myself on my time so far in the Royal Marines Band Service, so here goes... It was the middle of July and I was about to start what was going to be one of the hardest weeks of my life, a week that has changed my life completely – my audition week. The week had a slightly worrying start to it when I found out that there were eleven potential buglers, including me, and I knew that they only wanted four! I arrived on the Monday, met my fellow auditionees and then I started the tests. There was a music theory test that evening and on the Tuesday I started my physical tests, followed by musical auditions and other musical tests. On the Wednesday and Thursday there were yet more tests and quite a lot of waiting around! Eventually on the Thursday we had a final interview, which I must say was one of the most unnerving times in my life. I was faced by six high ranks in the band service, all trying to find out everything about me, including my musical background, my family life and my hobbies – of course I said that amateur radio was one! Then Friday came and it seemed like the longest morning of my life as I waited for the final interviews to finish and for the results to be announced. When my turn came, I was so nervous that I just about managed to walk up the stairs and when I was called into the room, I found the same six scary faces around the table, all looking only at me. They said a couple of things about how I’d performed over the week and then I was told the great news that I had got in and I was welcomed into the Royal Marines Band Service. From that Friday in July, throughout August and up to the beginning of my basic training on September 5th, I was keeping up my phys and sorting out what seemed an endless kit list to be fully prepared for my new life. Departure day soon came round and I was dropped off at Portsmouth by Dad, Tom (my brother) and a very teary Mum. From there I was taken away on a minibus to where I was introduced to some of the training team. First was my Drill Leader, who at the time scared the life out of me, especially when he asked me my name and I said Ben. I was forcefully told that he didn’t want to be my ‘mate’ and that he required my surname – I’ve paraphrased because I can’t really write the words he actually used! We were then taken to the accommodation – it was not exactly the Ritz! I met my new mates who were to become Royal Marines Band New Entry Troop 1/11 and I’m sure they’ll be some of my best mates that I will have for life.

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The Monday went reasonably well but then Tuesday came and the training really started. The phrase ‘start banging them out’ soon became a common one, it signalled that we had to start doing press-ups until we were told to stop (and we soon learnt that you don’t call a Corporal ‘Sir’!) On Tuesday we were issued with all of our kit in three great big bags, which at first was really exciting because we were receiving all of our new uniforms and equipment but we soon realised that it wasn’t as good as it first seemed. We were shown how to iron properly, the Marines way! Then we were shown how to fold, again, the Marines way! We were then told to go away and get on with it and that

our lockers had to be immaculate by the morning. We started work on that at about 2030 and were all up until about 0330-0400. Then we got a couple of hours sleep and were up again at 0530 with a full locker inspection not long after that. It must be said that adapting to military life was the hardest thing I had ever had to do and it was a massive culture shock. Having to get up every morning and iron our bed sheets so that all the creases lined up and everything looked pristine was

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very foreign to me but after a couple of weeks we all started to get used to it and we started to get to know each other better as well. Also in the first couple of weeks we did Initial Military Fitness (IMF), basically synchronised phys in the gym.

We also went on our first field exercise in those first two weeks. It was a bit like a camping trip at first but then we realised that our tents were little more than a ground sheet tied up between two trees and that we would have to be up three or four times during the night to do sentry duty. It must have been the most uncomfortable bed in the world and it made for the worst night’s sleep! In the morning, we had a field kit inspection and phys in the field. We all thought it was a

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tough trip but it turned out this field exercise was easy compared to some of the ones that we had to do later on! After week four, we were given a major privilege – the use of the washing machines! After four weeks of hand washing everything, using the washing machines and tumble-dryers was a very welcome luxury! It’s another of the things that before you join up, you take for granted but when you don’t have it, you seriously miss it. It was soon the end of week five and we were sent off to CTCRM Lympstone for the final ten weeks of our basic military training. It was a scary move for us because we had no idea of what could be coming up in the next ten weeks. We moved on the Sunday and on the Monday we were soon into the swing of things. Then we got going on the CBRN week – the gas chambers! We all thought this was going to be horrible and we were not wrong, it was. We went in to the chamber in groups of six, all looking like something out of Star Wars, and then we had to then take off the respirator and say our name, rank and number – it was not the time to forget your number (or name for that matter). This brought watering eyes, an extremely sore throat, stinging skin and a feeling of sickness. It wasn’t my idea of fun but it was an interesting start to the week. This was followed by several lectures and practice of some of the drills. One involved taking off our respirators and decontaminating our faces and then replacing our respirators without breathing in any of the gas. We practiced this outside in the fresh air and then, when our instructor felt that we had had enough practice, we had to do it inside the chambers. We were told that it would be fine as long as all of the drills were carried out correctly and, luckily, we were all fine and had no problems. The weeks that followed were interesting and some parts were even fun, but not all of them. The week after the gas chambers, we went into the field for our first exercise whilst at Lympstone. It was a two-night exercise and we were soon to learn of the ‘fun’ that could be had on Woodbury common! We had all heard horror stories about the ‘wet and dry’ routine and we were soon to find out what it was all about for ourselves. The first day was spent setting up the team tent and sorting out the main administration and then we moved on to some lectures in the field. As the evening drew nearer, we were all dreading the thought of ‘wet and dry’ more and more, until we were walked down to a muddy, smelly pond and we were told just to walk in. This was bad enough but then we had to sit down and get our heads under – it was very, very cold! The faster we did it, the faster we got out! After that, we had to get all of our kit sorted out and some food on. We then moved into our harbour position (where we were all camped up) and the night routine started. Sentries were posted and whoever wasn’t up or on sentry was

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trying to get some sleep. Luckily, we had to get into dry kit to go to bed and to go on sentry duty. Then the morning came and we found out the worst part of ‘wet and dry’. At 0600, we had to get up and change into our smelly, wet and cold clothes from the previous day. This was not nice and it was quite uncomfortable but after a bit, it wasn't too bad and we soon dried off during morning phys! We had another go in the pond that evening and the same uncomfortable routine all over again but it didn’t seem to matter so much then because we knew we were going back to base the next day. We then had a week on the ranges. This was great fun for the most part but the weather at the start was not good. We were all supposed to zero in our weapons on the first day but because of the weather, we had to call it off. This put us behind schedule so we really had to work hard to get back on time, which we did manage to do and by the end of the week we had all passed our shooting tests. The ETR ranges are just like a giant arcade game, with falling targets at 100, 200 and 300m, just a little bit more up market and technical! I really enjoyed this week and I found out that I’m not a bad shot! A couple of weeks later was comms week, something that I had a bit of previous experience in, or so I thought! I found that things were quite different to amateur radio with completely different ways of setting up the radios and a totally different VP (voice procedure). The guys in the comms section had a little saying, “no comms, no bombs”, which I thought was quite good! On one day before our weekend home, we had upset the training team by being late to a couple of things. That evening, when we were just doing the usual sorting out of our kit for the next day, I went up to the troop office to collect orders and that’s when we then found out that we had a full locker inspection that evening in 30 minutes. This was quite worrying and when my Drill Leader and one other came up to the accommodation, our evening was ruined! Our lockers were torn apart and the contents thrown everywhere! People’s boots and clothes were thrown up and down the corridor and whilst the Corporal shouted “Grenade”, water bottles were going everywhere! We laughed about it

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afterwards but having to find all of the mixed up kit and then re-iron and re-fold everything for an inspection the morning after really wasn’t funny at the time! All through these weeks we had phys three or four times a week. We were usually pushed to our limit but it was a good feeling of achievement afterwards. One day towards the end of our training, we did the endurance course, which is one of the commando tests. Luckily, we did it out of interest and we weren’t tested on it! This test is mainly a course of tunnels ranging in size – some were big enough to kneel in but some were just big enough to move in! Also along the course was the ‘sheep dip’, which was a tunnel that was filled with water. You were pushed through and then pulled out the other side – all I did was push myself under, which felt longer than it was but wasn’t too bad.

Two weeks before pass out, we had a week ‘square bashing’, which wasn’t too bad really because we were learning our drill for our pass out and our arms drill (with weapons). This was actually quite good fun and it was really good when we

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started making shapes and doing things with music. By the end of the week, we had a lot of our pass out routine sorted out and we were beginning to look quite good! The next week was a week in the field, which again was hard work but it was also quite enjoyable. This time we had comms and an ‘enemy’, members of our training team who weren’t with us at the time. They ran around in blue boiler suits in the troop pickup truck and even though we knew who they were, we were genuinely scared! It was great fun though, attacking the enemy at 0700 on our final day!

The final week then came around and we realised that we had just days left of basic training. We worked solid drill through that week and we were getting more and more excited as the days went on. On the Tuesday, we worked from 0800 to 2100 on the drill square – very tiring! On the Wednesday, we all got really excited because we were practicing with the band for the first time! This was great and it was a good taster for what was to come the next day.

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Thursday was the big day – pass out of phase 1 basic military training! We were all up late the night before, polishing boots and brasses ready for the next day and we had an early rehearsal on Thursday before we had the presentation of our peak caps. We then had the presentation and we swiftly moved on to get changed and get our rifles so that we could do our passing out parade. This was

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really enjoyable and I can easily say that it was one of the best days of my life so far! I think that in a way, I enjoyed my basic training, even though parts of it were very hard. I made some good friends and we can all look back and have a good laugh! And I do agree with what people told me – there was a lot of shouting and it was tough but in the end, it all worked out fine! I now move on to my music training, which is what we all really want to do. I will be based at the Royal Marines School of Music for the next two years and then I will be posted to one of the five bands across the country. I hope you have enjoyed reading about what I have been up to during the past 15 weeks and I hope to see you all sometime soon. Ben Streeter 2E0BSF

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Member's profile - Ted G3EUE I served in signals in the RAF during the last War and was introduced to Amateur Radio in 1948. I thoroughly enjoyed my time as a CW operator and liked the idea of continuing with it as a hobby. For a number of years I used low power (1W) mainly on 80 metres with a progression of ex-WD receivers – an R1155, an HRO and an AR88. Eventually, I progressed to a transceiver and have stayed with the Kenwood/Trio brand ever since. Prior to retirement in 1985, we decided to move house from the Croydon area to Bramber, where we have close ties in the district. I had a wish list of things I wanted, such as high ground, a large garden (minimum 132 feet long), essentially rural, a view of Chanctonbury Ring and so on. I achieved none of them but did find a house we really liked in the village, which is where we have been ever since. Bramber is just nine metres above sea level and we are tucked down below the castle mound. The garden is pretty small but I can squeeze in about 50 odd feet plus a lead-in to the rig. The shack is in the spare room on the first floor at the side of the house so it is not very practical to use anything other than an end-fed aerial. The house end is fixed to the TV mast whilst the bit at the end of the garden is a mast made from a redundant windsurfing mast up through a yew tree. The mast is nice and light to handle and reasonably hidden away. The aerial is about 25 feet high and it tunes quite well on all bands (160 to 10 metres) or, at least, I can put out some sort of signal. One of my concerns has been that Bramber village is in a conservation area so any grandiose ideas of fancy towers and beams is a no-no. After 60 years, someone close to me still cannot understand why I don’t have my aerials hidden in the loft so I make do with the best I can and generally I’m pretty satisfied with the results. I also have the advantage of the use of a redundant CB aerial. This was installed here years ago by the local authority for emergency communication purposes (a long story). It just so happens that with an ATU it tunes up perfectly on 24 and 28MHz so this year I have been using it regularly for the Club single band contest on 24MHz. Virtually all contacts have been made on CW and at times there has been some really interesting and workable worldwide DX . Currently, my gear is a Kenwood TS570D and I use a paddle key. My preference is one made by Electronic Devices (Cheltenham) Ltd that I bought many years ago. With an inbuilt keyer in the Kenwood I now only use the paddle itself, which I still prefer to my spare Hi-Mound – it’s all a matter of feel. Spare gear lying around unused includes a Redifon ATU and an ex-RAF Type D key.

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I use SSB occasionally, mainly on 80 metres, when I have a chat with the remaining members of a small group of ex-RAF era friends who are still around. I have always taken the view that amateur communication on the HF bands is possible by using just a simple wire aerial of indeterminate length with an ATU. It might not be very efficient but if it works, then really that is the objective – try it and see what happens! Ted G3EUE

Job Vacancy Due to the same work issues, Gary has stood down as the club programme organiser. We have things in place for March but nothing thereafter, we really DO need someone with a bit of spare time to volunteer to take this on, and remember that we now only have half the number of meetings to fill, so PLEASE, if anyone thinks they may be able to take this on please let us know ASAP. Without an organised, and advertised programme I feel the club will just drift into oblivion. John G8FMJ

The Club Championship Awards - an Idea from Chris G3NDJ During the recent decades, there have been so many advances in the methods of communication that have become available to us as radio amateurs. This, in turn, reflects on the way we used to enjoy our hobby, chatting and meeting new friends in distant parts of the world. Yes I know we have Skype and mobile phones, but it's not amateur radio For a long time, I have not been convinced that the format for awarding the annual Club Championship has been the right one to promote radio activity. We have 10 very basic club competitions which all members are capable of entering, but we seem to have members who are reluctant to switch their radios on and have a go at these. Until recently, members used to tell Ragchew the stations they had worked – even that seems to have disappeared! What has gone wrong? Have we forgotten why we became amateurs?

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I think it might help to encourage more members to switch on and use their radios if we change the format of the Club Championship Award to reflect members' radio activity. Ragchew is a bi-monthly publication. My suggestion is that reports of their QSOs during a two month period be sent either to the editor or me for publication. The award can then be presented to the member who has achieved the most contacts during a 12 month period There has to be rules of course - these I suggest as follows: QSO on any band - any mode, including portable and mobile. Direct contacts – no use of repeaters No duplicates during any two month period. Chris G3NDJ

Band Reports 10 metres. Worked or heard fairly recently: CX7CO Uruguay CO8LY Cuba HS0ZEE Thailand (H) ST2AR Sudan PJ2/PA0VDV Netherlands Antilles VP5CW Turks & Caicos Is. VU2PAI India VK6DU Australia XV1X Vietnam (H) P7STA Korea (H) 4PHCW/W4CW Sri Lanka. The band has been pretty quiet the last few days apart from Russians! Ted G3EUE

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10m A92IO, 9L0W, HC2SL, KG2A/VP9, PJ2/PA0VDV, G6PZ/MM in the Panama Canal, 5X1NH, PYs, W's. All CW and worked mainly in the late morning / early afternoon period 20m UA0s, ZK2V, KC4YDP/M, VQ9JC, W's. All CW and in the afternoon / early evening 40m 7Z1TT, A61K (both on SSB), VK6BN, VU2DIC, VK5CZ, ZL2ALJ. All CW and in the early evening 80m 4X4DK on SSB (late evening) Also, I made a kit in December from W9KNI (Idiom Press) in the USA. The kit is a voice keyer and it works well. I am looking forward to testing it out in the heat of battle on Saturday 14th January in the RSGB AFS SSB contest. 73, Graham G4FNL

List of WADARC awards WADARC annual awards and competitions The club awards are presented annually at the Christmas Party. Some awards are decided by the Chairman and committee on the last meeting of the year (just before the AGM) and the others are a competition style, some requiring logs submitted shortly after the closing date – details of what needs to be submitted are shown. For more information on all of the WADARC awards available, speak to the awards manager G3NDJ Club Championship 1st Oct – 30th Sept The more you are involved with WADARC, then the better the club will be. To this end the Committee present an award to someone who has made a good contribution to the club throughout the year. 40m Receiving Award 1st Oct – 30th Sept Excluding “A” licence holders One point per DXCC country G4MDP VHF Satellite Award 1st Oct – 30th Sept Satellite Contacts, QSO x QRA (no dupes)

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VHF award 1st Oct – 30th Sept QSO x QRA - no dupes G8VEH UHF Award 1st Oct – 30th Sept 432MHz up, QSO x QRA - no dupes G0FIG 50Mhz award 1st Oct – 30th Sept 50MHz activity, QSOs x DXCC x continents - no dupes HF Single Band shield 1st Oct – 30th Sept Band is allocated at the AGM for the subsequent year, one point per DXCC entity G3NDJ European Award 1st Oct – 30th Sept An award to encourage former B and new licensees on to the HF bands. Any mode can be used to contacts within Europe, but it must be direct and not via repeaters. Scoring is countries x contacts - no duplicates (dupes) Adur Communications Award Spring & Autumn All bands, QSOs + Bonus – best session of two Treasure Hunt cup Held occasionally one evening, highest scoring member or team Macdonald Shield May or June Members 2m Field Day QSO x QRA - no dupes DF Hunt Cup Held one club evening in July or August First member or team to find the elusive Fox G8XJA shield August Members HF Field Day QSO x DXCC - no dupes Construction Award Club evening in September Judged best entry by members who are present on the night to vote on the equipment G3LQI 10MHz Award October Any 24 hour period, QSOs x DXCC x continents - no dupes G3FRG Key Services to or achievements in Morse during the year, selected by committee G3FPM Award Best lecture from the year presented by a Club Member, selected by the committee

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G8BBI Chairman’s Cup Awarded by the Chairman G8HY Merit Award Most meritorious and helpful member, selected by the Retiring Committee

Useful VHF & UHF Websites Worldwide Tropospheric Ducting Forecast http://www.dxinfocentre.com/tropo_nwe.html Propagation studies page with bias towards VHF/UHF http://www.df5ai.net/ Explanations of VHF/UHF Propagation http://www.qsl.net/ve3dss/webdoc3.htm UKSMG UK Six Metre Group http://www.uksmg.org/news.php VHF/UHF Operating modes http://www.dxzone.com/catalog/Operating_Modes/VHF_UHF/

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Club program, activities and dates for the diary 1-Feb-12

Take your PIC

Gary Matthews

5-Feb-12 Sunday Morning Breakfast Meeting at the Goring Cafe 15-Feb-12

Discussion Evening & on the air

4-Mar-12 Sunday Morning Breakfast Meeting at the Goring Cafe 7-Mar-12

Maritime Shoreham

21-Mar-12

Discussion Evening & on the air

Trevor Povey

Items for Sale If you have any equipment you would like listed here, please send me the details via email.

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