6 January 2021 — To provide a little support in these difficult corona times, we have deciced to make the Fialka Refrence Manual available free of charge, 15 years after its initial release. In …
Like with the German Enigma machine, the Fialka has a reflector (German: Umkehrwalze or UKW) to the left of the cipher wheels. It connects the contact pins together in pairs, and makes …
Basic Fialka cipher machine M-125, codenamed FIALKA (Russian: ФИАЛКА), is an electromechanical rotor-based cipher machine, developed in the mid-1950s — during the Cold …
M-125, codenamed Fialka (Russian: ФИАЛКА), was an electromechanical rotor-based cipher machine, developed shortly after WWII in the former Soviet Union . Introduced in 1956 it …
Russian/Soviet variant of the M-125-3 (Fialka) The M-125-3M was the original Russian version of the enhanced Fialka cipher machine, on which all country-specific M-125-3xx machines were …
On this page we will try to explain the working principle of the two Fialka models, and show how they compare to the well-known German Naval Enigma machine. For this we will use the block …
The Fialka takes 10 unique cipher rotors. Each rotor is marked with a letter of the Russian alphabet, from A to K as shown below, and a machine should have one of each. The grey …
M-125, codenamed Fialka, was the original Russian version of the basic Fialka cipher machine, on which all later country-specific variants are based. It was used in the Soviet Union (USSR) …
The M-125 (codename: Fialka) was one of the most beautiful and compact electro-mechanical cipher machines produced by the USSR during the Cold War. It was used by most Warsaw …
Advanced Fialka cipher machine The M-125-3, codename FIALKA (Russian: ФИАЛКА), was a Russian electromechanical wheel-based cipher machine, developed during the Cold War by …