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M-125-3MP2 Fialka rotor cipher machine

1972

Museum for Communication Frankfurt, Museum Foundation Post and Telecommunication

Museum for Communication Frankfurt, Museum Foundation Post and Telecommunication
Frankfurt am Main, Germany

The Soviet "Fialka" rotor cipher machine was introduced in 1956; the improved version M-125-3M was used from 1965. There were keyboards in Cyrillic, German, Polish, and Czech for all the countries of the Warsaw Pact. The Fialka, which offered 590 quadrillion combinations, was far more secure than Enigma. The 10 rotors turned in opposite directions, and the Fialka could even encrypt one letter into itself. Most Fialka machines were melted down when the Warsaw Pact disintegrated in 1991.

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  • Title: M-125-3MP2 Fialka rotor cipher machine
  • Date Created: 1972
  • Location Created: Union der Sozialistischen Sowjetrepubliken (UdSSR)
  • Rights: © Museumsstiftung Post und Telekommunikation
  • Material: Metall, Kunststoffe
Museum for Communication Frankfurt, Museum Foundation Post and Telecommunication

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