MILITARY AND INDUSTRIAL INSTALLATIONS IN AND NEAR MOSCOW
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP80T00246A063200650001-8
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
C
Document Page Count:
44
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
January 9, 2012
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
June 22, 1962
Content Type:
REPORT
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP80T00246A063200650001-8.pdf | 1.94 MB |
Body:
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A H, Fa R,0A , 000 1 C ' 000 Q 4 0 ~l oQ ~~ i~~ 7r ~i rc? iii i~l i~ ~?~ cora~z r
SUBJECT Military and Industrial
Installations in and
Near Moscow C r--T CSC''
DATE OF
INFO.
PLACE &
DATE ACQ.
DATE DISTR. a June 1962
NO. PAGES 2
REFERENCES
REPORT
X ASR
O I~~QG~Q~r000 ~l H FO
NSA X OCR
X NIC X
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COUNTRY USSR (Moscow Oblast)
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OUA i -riUIvi
reports pertaining to military and industrial installations
Attachment 1 is a four-page report on the location, products, and technical and
administrative personnel of
No. 492 in Moscow.
ort on the Serp i Molot Steel Plant in Moscow.
a partial English translation. In 50X1-HUM
a ` specia metal which arr
list of the types
ived at the 50X1-HUM
plant for processing in early 1956. The metal was rumored to be very hard. It
was received in the shape of a cylinder about 80cm. long by 30 cm. in diameter
and weighed about 60 kg.
Attachment 4 is a ~ report
Lyubertsy Agricultural Machine Building Plant. I (general informa-
tion on the plant and production of grenades for mortars in 50X1-HUM
Foundry Sho No. 14 and Machine Shop No. 16. Three sketches of instruments made
snrl uqPd in finishing t e ro'ectiles are also included.. This
repor contains no information on 50X1-HUM
the plant's relationship with the missile industry."
Attachment 5, two .r.eports l contains information on the
craft, chemical, and machine building industries in Moscow as well as military
plants and restricted areas in and near Moscow. 50X1-HUM
Instrument /neumatic Machin] Plant
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INFORMATION REPORT INFORMATION REPORT
This material contaips information affecting the National Defense of the United States within the meaning of the Espionage Laws, Title
18, U.S.C. Sees. 793 and 799, the transmission or revelation of which in any manner to an unauthorized person is prohibited by law.
USSR (Moskovskaya oblast)
REPORT
DATE DISTR.
NO. PAGES
REFERENCES RD
INFO.
PLACE &
Pneumatic Instrument Plant
No. 492 in Moscow
C_n-N-P-I-D-E-N-T-I-A-L
STATE I I ARMY I NAVY I I AIR I I FBI
AEC
4" 1
Excluded ,a automatic
a;u rading and
aeL silicatian 50
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Attachment) _
PNEUMATIC INSTRUMENT PLANT NO. 492 IN MOSCOW
General
1. Pneumatic Instrument Plant No. 492 was subordinate to the
Ministry of Aviation Industry until 1957 when it became
subordinate to the National Economic Council of Moscow.
The plant was on Trekhgornyy pereulok in the Krasnopresnenskiy
rayon, F- 1 50X1-HUM
Products
2. The plant manufactured the following finished products:
pneumatic hammers, straight and angular pneumatic drills,
pneumatic shears, pneumatic screwdrivers, and a ar
screwdrivers for nuts and screws.
3. Steel, aluminum, rubber, cardboard, bronze, etc. were used at
the plant.
Plant Personalities
4. personalities at Plant No. 492: 50X1-HUM
a. Aleksandr Romanovich Terekhin, an engineer who was
director of the plant from November 1956 until May 1960.
November 1956 to May 1960.
c. Yevstafiy Ivanovich Volkhonskiy, chief technologist
at least from 1958 to May 1960. He was also chief of the
technical section of the plant. In May 1960 he was
studying at a polytechnical institute, probably in the
faculty of machinery, in Moscow.
d. Smirnov (f nu
to May 1960.
chief mechanic at least from November 1956
e. Valentin Ivanovich Melnikov, a machinery engineer who was
chief of the revolving instruments shop at least from 50X1-HUM
November 1956 to May 1960. F -1
C-O-N-F-I-D-E-N-T-I-A-L
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Attachment
C-O-N-F-I-n-E-N-T-I-A-L
-3-
f. Vasiliy Lobachev, chief
from 1958 to May 1960.
section at least from November 1956 to May 1960.
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-4 1
g. Vladimir Grigoryevich Agronik, an engineer in the technical
h. Aleksandr Aleksandrovich. Maksimovich, an engineer in the
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i. Savenkov (fnu), chief of the personnel section at least
from November-1956 to May 1960.
Vasiliy Andreyevich Fadeyev, president of the trade union at
the plant, who was a laborer i the technical t
least from 1959 to May 1960. 50X1-HUM
k. Vasiliy Pavlovich Belykh, CP organizer at the plant in
50X1-HUM
May 1960, who was a laborer in one of the plant shops.
Association of Plant No. 492 with Other Installations 50X1-HUM
Plant No. 492 received designs of instruments from the scientific
institute of the aviation industry, NIAT, in Moscow.
engaged in improving, he ec ca methods of the av a on
industry.
Organizational Chart
6. See the organizational chart of Plant No. 492 on page 4.
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Organizational Structure of Plant 492
National
Economic Council
Chief
technologist
F Technical I
section
Tooling
shop
Revolving Pneumatic
jtinstruments shoi ,hammer shop
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1. In 1956 aZ new machine fl, - was brought to the
Serp i Molot Plant.
blasts were heard daily. These blast$ were not very loud
it possible that they were not heard outside 50X1-HUM
3.
in
German machine. Dynamite was used in the installation of this machine sine
there was rook in fZELM some areas >et~ and the installation of
the machine took about one month. During this installation period, the 50X1-HUM
the plant. Dynamite was used sever&& times to break up the
blocks of slag so that they could be more easily removed frois the
plant.
Soviet and foreign uniforms at the plant, but
at the plants
not on official business or an inspection tour, but were just tourtsts.
There were also training programs for technical students at the plant
Mark
KhVG
Kh
ARK
(metals
Name of the Metal
Khronmaohisiy, (sic)
Khron (chrome?)
Anka (sic)
The plant began to work with this
metal in 1955? It was very soft,
and it took aZ long time to temper
40 Kh
A T M 12
ATM40
ATM 45
ATM-40
Kh V
Ya 1 T
Ya 1
Ya
YaRF2
Zi YaRF1
To p m n
40 % khron
Atomat
Atomat
Atomat
Kh Atomat 40% khron
Khron-vansir (sic)
C8LIDENTIAL
this *as a 50X1-HUM
Eullbl 1mm wt.as
N~rtq tad
d aHtatNs
50X1-HUM
It was rumored that these metals
were received from the EL NTROSTAL
Plant in the city of that name50Xl-H U M
They arrived at the Serp i Molot
Plant in cylindrical blocks one
meter long and 30 cm. in diameter,
and left the plant in sheets about
two meters square and no more than
two millimeters thiok.It was rumored
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... __. 1__ 50X1-HUM
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L V I11 IML.I1 I II?' nunvu$SS ISI
4, .rk Name of Metal Remarks
Y 10
Y 15
Y 20
Y 25
Y 30
Y 35
These metals were used for tools.uee6olli a
6. In addition to the metals listed above, other metals left the plant which
were designated only by a number, from 0 to 65, but always &'Multiple Of 5-50X1-HUM
7. New construction was always underway and
in 1953 the installation of two new furnaces was begun outside the plant grounds.
This area was northwest of the plant and was called the "new part."
8. In the beginning of 1956 the plant received eight blocks of a special
metal which, it was rumored, was very hard. The blocks were cylindrical, were
about 80 on. long sad about 30 om. in diameter. It was intended to roll thence
50X1-HUM
blocks on the machine but nothing came of this
since the metal cooled immediately and broke the rollers of the machine. The
plant director and various plant chiefs were present at this test. It wge
rumored that in order for this metal to be rolled on this machine, the rollers
of the machine would have to be exchanged for others made of a harder metal.
50X1-HUM
Another test was made two months after the first one, and the results were the
same. The same rollers were used in the second test as in the first.
Each block of this metal weighed about 60 kilos.
50X1-HUM
9. There were no IM restricted ES3IIUXIEZ shops in the plant. The offices
were the only areas that were prestrioted
they MUMM bore the sign
CdF1DENTIAL
50X1-HUM
I
Irsaw
scamw Ui wt/ml*..
6WIP0u1 UI
aaaanea"
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AMPNIIlIAN~~~f
'
ritrEU
Fr"r1-HUM
50X1 -H U W/,
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eom~o%t$SOr,~p /a t j /VOVQ a. 3 /a.r/On
?, ///9~ra~~a~tf'/~ ~w: tl+ur~.z, eon/'sZCcGlcor~yk.19t,'L
V , /7'~-L~-C.GL~GGVS' ?~yXy~?/~ fLr lf+~)L/ aCU-t~ A~hl'?~i ~.} ~Q:
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Fig.-n?2
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c
O(
t7p 4
/J/ Ewe NN
/mssrefu fle,Lz~
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Fig.-n02
1yy5 Lt-tI;,tP,vJ
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ATTACNMENT
CQNFtD TAL
COUNTRY : USSR ( Moscow oblast
SUBJECT s LYUBERTSY AURICULTURAL MACHINERY BUILDING PLANT
Plant Identification and Location
1. The Iyubertsy agricultural. machinery building plant, not known by any
other name, with an unknown numerical designation during WW II was
subordinate to the Ministry of Agricultural, although two shops were
controlled by personnel of the Ministry of Military Industry.
2. The plant was in Iyubertsy rayon, Moscow oblast to the left'of the
Ryazan highway and to the right of the Ryazan railroad line. It was
approximately nine kilometers from the railroad
junction in the vicinity of the Chukhlinka railroad station, Perovo
quarter. See attachment No. I.
Plant Description
3. It occupied a fairly extensive fenced in area to the southwest
50X1-HUM
between the Ryazan railroad and highway. It was converted. during
World War II.
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machinery had been replaced by modern Soviet-make machines. After
World War II, the production of agricultural machinery was resumed,.
although two secret shops remained engaged in military production
undoubtedly for the purpose of rapidly converting back to military
production in the case of an emergency. it would not
take more than a month or two to convert the plant. 50X1-HUM
4. The plant contained the following installations s
three foundries; No 14 was secret and made grenades fpr mortars
one forge shop
one instrument shop
one plant machinery repair shop
one MIESIVERM modael/die shop
one compressor shop
one eleotrio/pwer transformer shop
one carpentry shop
two project/design shops; one engaged in production, the other in tool-
ing
two laboratories; one controlling instruments and measurements, the
other for materials
three mechanical/machine shops; No. 16 was secret and engaged in mi.li-
produotion
one automatic bolts and nuts shop
one assembly shop
a fire-fighting station
a building with directorate, personnel, OP, and labor union offices
a first-aid station.
Description of Shops
5. Almost all the brick and iron structures with metal sheet roofs and
clerestories were old. The one-story rectangular-shaped shops were
divided into sections by stone walls. Sbome shops had a mezzanine
for offices and small tool storage areas. The foundries had basements
for storing coal, sand, and dies. The instrument shop
50X1-HUM
had conduits/pipes with meters for the conduction of water,
50X1-HUM
electricity/power, heat, and chinery WP4
50X1-HUM
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good condition and well maintained.
Automatic Shop
6.
Raw
7.
Only the bolts and nuts
cally and electrically,
instruments.
Materials
shop was automatic and equipped with mechani-
but not electronically operated/controlled
The plant received coal, iron billets,
cotton, glass, petroleum, fats, paint,
scrap, logs and planks, sand,
and sheets of .stainless steel.
All these materials were visible on cars oB piled alongside the shops.
Source admitted that other raw materials must have been received
because tin was eonsumed in quantity but nickel and copper in lesser
amounts. The majority of raw materials arrived by rail and only a
small quantity by highway.
Water Supply and Electricity
8.
Water was supplied via underground mains and probably from Moscow.
Power arrived via aerial cables to the plant transformer station
which distributed it to the shops.
the mA.ier-
50X1-HUM
ity of the machines, such as, MM lighting used 220 volts/voltage and
only the large machines operated with tripbase 360 volts.
Regular Plant Products
9. The plant manufactured hauling/dragging agricultural machines, such as,
harvesters, sowers, shellers, mutiple furrow plows, double furrow
plows, burring machines, and Mm clod breakers. All theetmaohines
hu.d to be pulled by'tractors and
had no spec' al
50X1-HUM
characteristics or modern technical application/use. Each machine
bore the name of the plant, the series number, type, and date of manu-
facture, thus spare parts could be requested by MTS and/or collective
farms. The production norm/output of the shops was unknown.
Destination of Products
10. Agricultural machinery left. th parts of the USSR,
howevar_ r~rimarily fnr airninvli,~rra ?ao r, Yflrlnirlno+a," 50X1-HUM
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Production in_ Secret Shops
11. Foundry shop No. 14 and machine shop Nov 16 were engaged in making
grenades for mortars. Both wets seoret shops and directed by a o lon#1..
and 4ietenant colonel. In shop No. 14 the grenade csll.ed- ! was
founded. In shop No. 16 the mortar projectile/shell was fini,ed.
Measurement oinstxvments made in the instrument shop 'see atta bu nts
Nos.. II,III, and If) were used in finishing. These grenades were. made
with great care and precision; I wn i -HUM
The grenades were made in two sizes (see measurements on st+Ck^w..At
50X1-HUM
No. II, No. 1) which were the two types of modele/dies delivered for
the construction of measuring instruments. F
on several oaoa
eiona the grenades were sent to the test field
location unknown.
50X1-HUM
?' prod i.otion
was small. because the shops were
small and the work very painstaking.
Packing
50X1-HUM
12. Wood was used for packing. Closed, well constructed boxes were used
for machines with more consistency/firmness and lees apt to deteriorate.
email I firm wood boxes left
the carpentry shop EMI for the machine shop whioh
packing the projectiles manufactured there.
werer.
50X1-HUM
14. All the boxes, excepting the small ones, bore the name of the plant,
description of contents, gross weight, destination, Sim shipment
number, and'guarantee seals for the organization, M'T$ or ooneigoee.
This was done to avoid loss or theft during shipment,
taken in plaoing then upright.
oi1oading the machines on railroad oars auuoh care w85e0X1-HUM
Transportation
15_ The fllant was-meth ' a sour line and hiahwalr. ADDroximatels 90
50X1-HUM
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J r (AJN-I1l-N IAI
percent of the materials and products left and entered by rail and ten
percent by highway. The spur line of the main *oeoow- jrasan line
entered the rear of the installation and branched out intwievsraal lines
going to the foundry shops, material.- warehouses in the open air, and
the assembly shop. There were several cranes with .a bridge between
for removing machines from the assembly shop and loa$tthem on railroad
cars. TTe frequency of entry and exit of railroad oars/trains was
unknown.
16. The approximately ten-meter wide. branch highway of the main Moscow.
Byazan highway was in good condition, open all year, and bad good
drainage/ditches. The plant used eight-ton ZI3 and Dodge truoke and
had a motor ' park with at-bout 20 or 25 trucks of various sizes.
17. The plant bad no river transportation.
Storage
18. Materials were stored in the open air at various place within the
installation, although primarily/mostly alongside the UI foundry-9
HUM
carpentry, and sawmill shops. there was a mall siruzott ii
next to the offices REM where valueable apparel and.materiale were
kept. Without. authorization no one was permitted to enter.the airy
areas within the structures/shops.
Organization and Personnel
19. There was a director, chief :engineer, office personnel, ih / pro; sot
shops, and in every shop a chief of control and control -assistants;
50X1-HUM
20. Approximately 8,000persons, the majority skilled workers, were employed
at the plant. There were about 140 to 160 workers in the precision
instruments shop which had no fixed norm because of its precision
production. The names of plant directors were unknown. 50X1-HUM
21
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_ LlV~~1 IvII1.u.r.
50X1
22.
prisoners
from Rumania and Czechoslovakia worked at the. plant.
Work Conditions
23. Al]. the shops, excepting the instrument shop, worked three eight-hour
shifts and I a. six-hour shift on Saturdays. Officially Sunday
was a day of rest but beoause.of electricity restrictions, they did not
rA Ll_ on Thursdays. Eve worker.' 3 received a 12 50X1-HUM
` MFn r`y -day BnIILL6t1 vitOatiOnr
Wages were the standard/regular ones in the'USSR.
In general sanitary conditions were good. The foundry shops were the.
unhealthiest. The norm could be easily met. There were'no strikes or
unjustifiable absences. NO privileges were granted because of Oduo
tion or for politioal reasons.
Plant Security
24. The surrounds had
no special ZOU guard installations.
l76=nn
Only in shops loos. 14 and 16 was there a sentry/guard who controlled.
the entry of only authorized personnel.
50X1-HUM
25. There were both men and women guards, number unknown,'armed with pistols
at the entroe gates. At night t patrolled the interior of the
installation. The pass was surrendered at the gate and picked up on
departure. There was a fire-fighting team equipped With vehicles and
other auxiliary equipment.
Ci_fense and DOSAAP'
ae
26. There were no shelters or air s*d jrefoautytionary measures. All =In=
workers were Soviet citizens and DOSAAF members and obliged to attend
all meetings of same. On one occasion, perhaps in 1954 or. 1955, a
booklet with instructions in case of an attack or atomic attack was'
distributed among DOS,AAP' members, but in general not muoh attention was
nai d to i t PhwrM ..rra.o 1 1 1 c / 4 + 104 a I mo--- - 50X1-HUM
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Produdtion Dericienoies
CONFIDLI' IIAL
27. The most frequent difficulty enoountered was that 50X1-HUM
parts left the
foundry shops with pores or were defective and herd to be re3ootsd.,
` Put re
50X1-HUM
production plans were unknown, but it can be supposed that therewould
be changes or modernization of production
50X1-HUM
Legend
Attachment No-?I No. 1
A 3p precision instrument for measuring the eccentricities of the mortar
grenade, mine, (see sketch for measurement)*
A. Armature of U the instrument where the mine was placed in the oaf of
testing in the shop. The interior of the pattern contained the
verifying/checking devices,.
B. Devices where the mine was put and, a rotating movement established.
C. Lower part of the mine where the foundeod iron wane%ins were plaoe4.
D. Head of the mineiwhere the fuse was placed after.
loading the gear/device/missile.
E. Mine eccentric registering instrument.
Attachment No. II. No. 2
Precision instrument for measuring the thickness of the walls of thee.
used in foundry shop No. 14 and jeahine shop No. 16.
A. Fouhded iron base plate (seeiketah o r measurements).
B. Steel pivot introduced into the mine to check the thickness of the ii
walls.
Thickness measuring instrument and checking.Lifferenoes-in those
marked/indioated.
D. Counterweight of graduation.
E. Base of the registering instrument.
Attachment No. II, No. 3
Tempered steel measuring template for measuring the opening.of the head
of the mine a w fuse
~ ta t~ 50X1-HUM
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A. Fitting points in the mouth of the mine*
This template was very important and. the. tolerance of error:.allowed was
hundredths of a millimeter. With this verification/ check many gee. were
rejected. See sketch for measurimente. There were two templates :for the
tw sizes of mines.
Attachment No. II, No. 4 50X1-HUM
Actual size of the tempered steel template which had several 'Z grooves
and which was used for checking the fitting of,the stabili
zing fins of the mine.
Attachment No. In, No. 1
Precision instrument for measuring the calibers of the.ie and other '
devices manufactured in the secret shops.
A. Base plate of the measuring instrument and correction of ?oilibers.
B. Framework of the rotating axle.
C. Rotating axle where the holding disks for measuring the caliber was
coupled.
Holding disks.
Holding device of the fin w)tich rotated and was used to measure the
height of the fin. Actual size.
Attachment No. IV, No. 2
Approximate sketch of the precision instrument for measuring the height
of the fins of the mine. Actual size.
A. Device which determined the accepted tolerance of the height of the
fins. The existent distance between projection No. 1 and No. 2.
50X1-HUM
Attachment No. IV, No. 1
bo a proverkdIna bieni.
E. Caliber for registering measurements.
F. Registering apparatus.
Attachment No. III, No. 2
A. Sketch of the dIskq (actual size) for measuring calibers called
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IMP
COUNTRYt USSR .
SUBJECTS Industries and Installations in the
City of Moscow.
Date Report: 9 May, 196:50X1-HUM
Aviation Engine Factory in Moscow.- ~~Q orc..~lw '' 50X1-HUM
1. This factory
was located in
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the village of YAUZA, which has now become part of the city of Moscow. It is
located some 300 meters to the West of the Moscow-Murmansk rail line; and to the
West (?) and some 1,000 meters from the Central Anti-tuberculosis Institute of
the Academy of Sciencies of the USSR. This factory was installed on a cleared,
and flat area of the forest and there were few buildings in the vicinity. The
eastern side, which was closer to the aforementioned rail line, was surrounded by
50X 1
a a barbed wire fence.
this factory must have been built approximately around
1950 but few people knew of its existence. It consisted of a small building
which made up the frontage, located close to the fence, and where the personnel
section or something similar was housed. Farther back, another building could
be seen which was of a height equivalent to six floors, although in reality
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the surface of this building
was in the shape of a trapezoid, measuring approximately 60 x 20 meters. Behind
this building there were at least two other buildings, although they could not
be seen very well. A railway track entered the installation from a nearby rail-
50X1-HUM
there were only two floors.
way station called YAUZA.
0150X1-HUM
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( flNFIIEN I IAL
noise of jet motors being tested many times -- sometimes
during the day but the majority of the times during the night.) I 5
No watch towers were seen but guards could be seen
near the wire fence, such as those seen in the aviation factories.
a*n&A,LA-
the guards were subordinate to a special MVD Cusodian Cores. 50X1-HUM
During the nights, the guard service was reinforced 'the Moscow-Murmansk
railroaddsi.., which was located close to the installation.
jet motors were tested here between 3 and 5 in the
.
(Alo. by)
USSR Academy of Sciences Anti-tuberculosis Institute
0-W
4. At the beginning of 1956, it was said that the location of this Institute would
5.
afternoon and around this same time in the early morning. During this latter
test session, all the patients interned at the Anti-tuberculosis :anatorium
were disturbed in their sleep. In August of 1956, all the patients from this
sanatorium were transferrred to other sanatoriums. It was said that certain
reformations were going to be made in the installations of this sanatorium
center, but it was also commented that they were thinking of prohibiting residence
in this same zone
be changed. the main object of this move (even though 50X1-HUM
they said that extensive repairs had to be made) was perhaps because of its
proximity to the factory or experimental center (No. 5 on the attached overlay),
which would in effect constitute a disturbance to the sanatorium center.
Certain famous Soviet medical personalities participated in the scientific work
carried on at this Institute. One of these personalities was BOGUSHHIfEV
50X I -HUM
He was
the chief surgeon at the Institute and also of the Railway Hospital of Moscow
where mostly military personnel were attended; he was also the chief surgeon
at the Kremlin Hospital. This man had worked a great deal with the KOGAN
brothers, doctors who had been arrested and tried during the "TriAl of Doctors"
on the death of Stalin. BOGUSH was a military man 50X1-HUM
CENFIDEN`CIAL
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military men ~
One of their sisters 50X1-HUM
was the Director of the "Sokolniki" Medical Institute of 1osoo,.v.
The Director (a woman) of this Anti-tuberculosis Institute, was
a Doctor, but she was not scientifically outstanding; she was designated to
this position by the Soviet Supreme. She was known by the patronymic of
Lam, L.ebedivct.
it was relatively
6. International scientific congresses were held at this Institute and frequently
foreign scientific medical commissions visited the place.
was made on rata. The Institute had 50X1-HUM
about 500 beds for tuberculosis patients and many laboratories. It also had
several auditoriums for the scientific meetings.
FaotoFy related to eieotr&c power
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this factory was related to something in connection with
electric power
unimportant, at least in 1956, since it did not have a railway entrance and tip
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street - Fabrichnaya ulitsa - which it faced, was very poorly paved.
any automotive vehicle traffic that this installation 50X1-HUM
may have had, would be slight. 50X1-HUM
,Vo.Yox, o 7,
ELEKTROZAVOD YA FactoZZ - la=s, in gerier *I, ar
a1sotrksl qupa atus.
50X1-HUM
8. Wi I this factory produced
e""lamps, , and electric apparatus such as engines, etc.
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they had some secret shops. Important personalities such as MAIMKOV 50X1-HUM
and BULGANIN had held positions in the management of this factory.
this was important and
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the factory's production
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did not consist solely of ordinary lighting lamps. Approximately between 1952
and 1955, this factory was greatly enlarged. In the section where light bulb-
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were produced,
some 5,000 workers were employed in this installation,
among which were some of the finest electrical specialists and the best engineers
who had finished their studies in the Energetics Institute of Moscow. This
factory competed with Factory 45 (both=located in the STALINSKIY rayon) for th-
rinurtnr'taTt N 1 50X1-HUM
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P !, nW1kL 5UX1-HUM
9.
election of the rayon deputy to the Supreme Soviet, the oarididates for which
always came from the most important factories.
Energy Research Institute (A/o ? Q
institute was located in a newly constructed building which was inaugurated
The research
between 1954 and 1955.
in 1955 it was said that they built
Aviation Factory 45, Moscow (iVo- i0 a., I
produced in this factory
people knew. However
.K- Ytctj
irifIIII
the type
of engines were changed or modernized two or three times a year.
there oould not be a definite motor or engine called KLIMOV,
since this was the name of the Construction Engineer at Factory 45, who designed
the majority of the engines which were produced at this factory and therefore
all the different motor types would have carried this name.
designed by KLIMOV were talked about
Moscow; specifically
factory 45 sent engines to all the aviation factories in
they sent engines to the KHII factory, the
KUNTSEVO factory and the TUSHINO factory.
tort'
numerical designations of the engines that were
secret because very few 50X1-HUM
latter factory did not produce engines but
did test them and therefore
the engines on some kind of a device
the50
it was possible that they mounted 50X1-HUM
Factory 45 also sent engines to Factory 30 where airplanes were
assembled. This factory also had a rela SHEV, but
r r m nn' `p i 50X1-HUM
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1 W .,
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Uo, ,'~rjUCiV I IHL
Factory 45 also had some kind of relationship with a new
-5-
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they only received parts
TS
(built around 1955 cc at the beginning of 1956) factory which existed in ODIN+OHOVO
(Moscow Oblast) with which they interchanged specialized workers. 50X1-HUM
This interchange of workers was also maintained with the other factories mentioned.
they probably did send to this factory rocket engines and t.50X1-HUM
bodies and ribs of rockets which were produeed in shop No. 28 of factory 45? n
the rockets were assembled in this new factory;
both factories since
mounted in the YAUZA factory or in h
in any of the aforementioned factories
13. Shop No. 28 produced some tubes or cyl
body of the rockets), made with a type of plating of a special steel alloy. The
plating measured some 10 to 12 milimeters in thickness, and was very shiny (a
little bit less shiny than ordinary stainless steel); it eras stainless and very
elastic (if it slipped off the plating rollers before being welded after being
shaped to a tube, it returned to its original position, that is, completely flat;
its outstanding quality was its hardness. Some of the workers had attempted to make
things for themselves out of the scraps of this plating and when they tried to
drill a hole, they broke the drill bits without penetrating the plating; it was also
said that it had a great resistance to friction.
from the Serp i Motot Factory in Moscow which was famous for being the best or one
of the best factories in the USSR insofar as the quality of special steels prodv50X1-H U M
vpwre concerned. It could also have come from MAGNITOGORSK
plating were of three different types with reference to size;
the plating was all of the same thickness
One kind of tubes measured 12 to 14 meters long
and 1 meter in diameter or perhaps a bit smaller
type measured approximately 1'50 meters in lengt
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rockets could have been
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rockets were not mounted
5
these were the
this plating came
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th
-50X1-HUM
e diameter
the most important work done on these
tubes was with the electrical welding which was stitched and automatic. The time
fl NflnrNTI 1 50X1-HUM
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1
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EIDENTIAL
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dedicated to the welding operation on each tube was chronometized and there was
no tolerance. The edge of the plating lapped over the other side by some two
centimeters and the welding was done on the outside as well as the inside of the
tube. After welding, it was passed on rollers to a shop Which was more seoret than
No. 28, where the rough seams of the welding were smoothed out and where it was
submitted to a hermetic test In this same shop
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some cones of the same type of plating as used on the tubes were made. These cones
had a base of the same diameter of the tubes (approximately), the height of which
was more or less 1150 meters. the point of the cones
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was not sharp but they had a kind of hole from which it could be said that they
should be called the trunks of cones rather than cones. These cones or trunks
of cones were not fastened to the tubes in shop No. 28; 50X1-HUM
shop No. 28 worked three shifts daily and employed a total of
approximately 400 workers; of these some 150 were welders; the work was semi-
automatics a nrane ptrt the sheets of plating on the welding machines. Ones the
tubes were welded, another crane took them off the reels and put them on some small
pullies where they were taken to an even more seoret department, inside the same
shop. The cones also came to this same department.
15. In 1956, the shift consisted of 8 hours per day and 48 hours per week.
reduced this by one hour per day, that is,
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they worked 7 hours per day and 42 hours per week. In winter and summer the work
shift relief came at the same times the first shift went in at 7 in the morning
and came out at 4 in the afternoon with one hour to eat; the second shift went in
at a quarter to 4 and finished at midnight; the third went in at midnight and ended
at 7 in the morning of the following day. Technicians and specialists who worked in
the technical offices of the management, as well as all the administrative employees
had other hours which consisted of a special shift starting at 9 in the morning and
ending at 6 in the afternoon (8 hours of work and one to eat). Also the shop chiefs,
technologists, masters and shop managers, had a special shift starting at 8 in the
morning and ending at 5 in the afternoon. Between each shift, while the relief shift
came in, there was an interval of some 20 minutes, during which time some of the
machines were stopped but not all of them. ri n' SOI?TIROVOCHNAYA Railway Statiop Uj[ir DENTIAL
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"' !IUEN I IA .
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16. The SORTIROVOCHNAYA railway static, )articularl3r the merchandise station, was
considered to be the most important, insofar as traffic of merchand1 na
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was concerned, in Moscow. It had its own installations for the repair of rail cars.
All varied kinds of cars could be seen there at any hours, ordinary merchandise
cars as well as special Saar material transport cars and others. It occupied a large
amount of space and was guarded,, like the rest, by the railway station guards.
Aviation Experi l Fay (A10-19.07) ? ~)
17. This factory was located on Avigpotornaya ulitsa
some 300 meters from the telecommunication center and some 400 50X1-HUM
meters from the Energeticd Institute, in the city of Moscow.
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the rear part of the factory bordered -arith the Energetics Institut's football field.
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On the entrance door theca
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was a sign which said "Experimental" and mentioned no other name. In general
that it Baas surrounded by living quarters and by the installation's own 50X1-HUM
buildings ..hioh formed a :.-all to the outside. From the outside, one rec
the existence of some 5 industrial buildings,
e