HX-63
The HX-63 was an advanced rotor machine designed by Crypto AG,[1] who started the design in 1952. The machine had nine rotors, each with 41 contacts. There were 26 keyboard inputs and outputs, leaving 15 wires to "loop back" through the rotors via a different path. Moreover, each rotor wire could be selected from one of two paths. The movement of the rotors was irregular and controlled by switches. There were two plugboards with the machine; one to scramble the input, and one for the loop-back wires. The machine could be set up in around 10600 different configurations.
A diagram of a loopback-rotor construction; in this simplified example, two rotors with nine contacts each are used. There are six inputs and outputs, leaving three loop-back wires. | |
Type | rotor machine |
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Only twelve of these machines were manufactured, and it was adopted by only one department of the French Government (about 1960).[2]
See also
References
- Klaus Schmeh (2008). Codeknacker gegen Codemacher: die faszinierende Geschichte der Verschlüsselung ; [Sachbuch]. W3l GmbH. pp. 208–. ISBN 978-3-937137-89-6.
- Cipher A. Deavours; Louis Kruh (1 January 1985). Machine Cryptography and Modern Cryptanalysis. Artech House. pp. 199–. ISBN 978-0-89006-161-9.
External links
- Jerry Proc's pages — photographs and a brief description
- Notice of a past eBay auction of an HX-63
- John Savard's discussion on the machine
Further reading
- Cipher A. Deavours and Louis Kruh, "Machine Cryptography and Modern Cryptanalysis", Artech House, 1985, p199.
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