(This view is more complicated than the previous ones)
In Table 5, each column of all nine subsections contains five vertical rows of digits, each with three digits. These three digits always indicate one of the three main keys. In the table below, the three-digit numbers obtained are entered in lines. Each of these lines contains five numbers (keys) from one column. For example, we obtain the first lines of the lower table from the first column of the upper left subsection.
In the table above, let's have a look at the absolute order in the vertical rows of digits in each subsection. All show six keys of the first group (168, 735, 492, 276, 519 and 843). It’s precisely the keys of this group that have created side B of the Table 5. These keys are also indicated by the first, second and third digits of the numbers along the horizontal rows. In the vertical rows, the first, second and third digits of each of the three subsections indicate the three main keys. All this happens without a single exception.
In the table below you can see the digital values of the numbers of each row of the table above. The right column shows the digital values of these sums.