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← KzU-63 Yugo Voice Radio
Voice encryption device
- this page is a stub
The KzU-64 is a narrow-band
voice encryption device,
developed in the former
Yugoslavia in 1987 and built
by the Rudi Čajavec factory in Banja Luka
(Bosnia and Herzegovina). It was intended for use with narrow-band
VHF/UHF FM (mobile) radios, such as the UKT FM-66/17.
The KzU-64 can be seen as the narrow-band variant of the wide-band
KzU-63 voice encryptor.
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The device is also known as DVP (Digital Voice Protection Module).
A variant of the KzU-64, known as the DVP-96, was created especially for
use in combination with the Pionir 500K series VHF/UHF FM transceivers,
in which it was fully controlled from the front panel of the radio [1].
The image on the right shows the front panel of the KzU-63, which is
identical to that of the KzU-64.
At present no further information about the KzU-64 is available.
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You can help us to expand this page by providing additional information
about this device or, better, a working original. If you have any information,
please contact us.
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- Power voltage: 12V DC
- Power consumption: 30mA
- Data transfer rate: 9600 bps
- Cipher period: 1060
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© Crypto Museum. Created: Monday 13 April 2015. Last changed: Sunday, 25 February 2018 - 18:22 CET.
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