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4/16/2011

RU-2/1 Yugoslav Peoples Army VHF Radio Station #2298

RU-2/1 Yugoslav Peoples Army VHF Radio Station #2298

RU-2/1 Yugoslav Peoples Army VHF Radio Station 

The RU-2/1 is a ex-Yugoslav Peoples Army VHF radio starion. The radio is a low power portable VHF (FM) Radio, made by RUDI CAJAVEC, from Banja Luka (Ex Yugoslavia). The RU-2/1 has been designed to provide command communications at battalion and company level. It was also used in vehicles and by mounted troops. The RU2/1 replaced the older RUP-12 ex-Yugoslav peoples army VHF radio.

Frequency Range 30 to 69.95 MHz in 50 Khz steps. The desired frequency is set by 3 knobs on the front plate of the radio.

The radio is powered by a standard JNA 12V/6aH battery pack. It can also be powered externally from 12V Vehicle power supply.

The RU-2/1 and accessories are supplied in very good condition, tested and operational. Please choose from accessories options below.
 
Technical Specification:
Frequency Range: 30 to 69.95 MHz
Channel Spacing: 50 KHz
Modes of Operation: FM
Power Requirements: 12 VDC
Battery: 12 Volt
 
RU-2/1 AccessoriesAccessories
Option 1
Accessories
Option 
2
RU-2/1 Tested Condition "Grade 2"
Handset.
Long Whip Antenna.
Short Whip Antenna.
Headset.
Carry Bag.
PRICE£95£145
Details
 
Equipment GradeGrade 2
Price:£ 95.00 (About US$ 155.80)

Options
 
Accessories Options
QuantityThis Item May Now Be Out Of Stock!
Please E-Mail sales@armyradio.com


 

  Detailed Pictures



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4/02/2011

O.O

"God's Secret Agent" no more, for one so blithe as to go to Him. Vale at atque! (Hale and Farewell)


----- on 03/13/2011 11:18 PM wrote:

>
Flower power drug icon dies in Australia: family
(AFP) #150; 1 hour ago
LOS ANGELES #151; Owsley "Bear" Stanley, who supplied LSD to the 1960s flower power generation and worked closely with psychedelic band The Grateful Dead, died Sunday in a car crash in Australia, his family said.
Stanley, who was 76, started as a sound engineer for the band and is credited with developing hifi technology which is now taken for granted, such as on-stage monitors for bands to hear themselves while playing.
But he was more remembered for the pure form of LSD he manufactured, fueling the flower power counter-culture which exploded out from San Francisco in the mid to late 1960s.
Stanley died when his car swerved off a road and slammed into a tree, media reports said. Queensland police said a 76-year-old died at the scene while his female passenger was taken to Cairns Base Hospital with minor injuries.
"We are extremely saddened to report that Owsley "Bear" Stanley, our beloved patriarch, died (Sunday) in an automobile accident near his home in Far North Queensland Australia," said a family statement
"The family asks for privacy while we deal with this tragedy," added the statement, issued by former Grateful Dead tour manager Sam Cutler.
The grandson of a former governor of Kentucky, Stanley was the original LSD "cook" who produced large quantities of LSD at his lab in San Franciso. He was arrested several times for drug making.
He briefly managed the Grateful Dead and oversaw their live sounds at a time when little thought was given sound systems in public arenas. His tape recordings of Dead concerts were turned into live albums.
Stanley reportedly became an Australian citizen in 1996 and lived near the northeastern Australian city of Cairns, where he worked as an artist, making gold and enamel sculptures.
He is survived by his wife Sheila, four children, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.