CIS Modes
From The RadioReference Wiki
Welcome to the CIS Modes article. This table will deliniate the various digital modes used by the Russians (a.k.a Commonwealth of Independent States) and their alleged proxies. Wbile software like Rivet will decode some of these modes, the traffic is usually heavily encrypted. Deciphering the meaning of this traffic and stations is very much an ongoing process.
Mode Name | Synonym | Notes |
---|---|---|
AT3004D | CIS-12 | Waterfall |
FIRE | ||
MS5 | ||
Russian 12 Tone Modem | ||
CIS-11 | TORG 11 | |
CIS-14 | AMOR | |
AMOR96 | ||
PARITY-14 | ||
CIS-16 | ||
CIS-3000 | ||
CIS-8181 | CIS-81 | |
FROST | ||
FSK200 | ||
Mazielka | ||
MFSK-4 | via Antonio I5-56578 Digital Blog | |
Moroz | Russian 53.8bd/500 FSK | |
T206 | ||
Russian OFDM Modem | Waterfall | |
Russian 50bd/500 FSK | NT9P/KM4T Net | via Antonio I5-56578 Digital Blog |
Russian 66 Tone MFSK Modem | Rare | |
Serdolik | CROWD-36 | |
CIS-36 | ||
T600 | BEE | |
36-50 | ||
Russian 50bd Secure | ||
XPA | CIS MFSK20 | |
XPA2 | NUM13 | |
CIS MFSK16 | ||
Yaktah Voice Scrambler |
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