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For pictures, history, and technical information about the Enigma and other cipher equipment, please visit our online museum.
Home - Enigma Museum
Welcome to the world's only source for complete, original working Enigma Machines.
Introduction - Enigma Museum
Relatively few Enigma machines survived the war as the retreating German armies destroyed them to avoid their capture, and, at the end of the war, Churchill ordered the remaining machines destroyed. Enigma Museum is devoted to recovering, documenting, restoring, displaying, and trading in Enigma machines as well as other antique cipher ...
ENIGMA MUSEUM: CIPHER MACHINES FIALKA NEMA AND OTHER …
We maintain an on-line museum and offer a detailed book and CD-ROM Enigma Library. With our extensive network of historians, collectors and skilled restoration specialists, we provide Cipher machines, information and services as listed below.
Relic Enigma Machine Parts Collection - Enigma Museum
This is a collection of relic and unearthed battlefield-found parts from Enigma machines discovered decades after WWII. 1) Enigma Rotor part – Metal thumbwheel from Enigma I rotor. 2) Enigma Rotor fragment – Bakelite fixed contact plate from Enigma I …
ENIGMA MUSEUM
We work with an extensive network of historians, collectors, skilled restoration specialists, and non-profit institutions. Enigma Museum also provides advice for other museums and collectors, props for movie and television companies and a frequently updated list of important conferences, simulators, projects and relevant links </b> </font>
Russian Cold War Era M-125 Fialka Cipher Machines - Enigma …
The Fialka is generally similar in design to the German Enigma cipher machine but it has 10 rotors with 30 Russian characters/contacts instead of the 3 or 4 rotors with 26 letters/numbers/contacts in the German WW-2 Enigmas.
3-ROTOR ENIGMA A1149 - Enigma Museum
This Enigma is accompanied by three rotors (II, IV, and V). The reflector carries the same serial number as the machine, A1149. Allied code breakers, including Alan Turing, developed the world’s first computers to break German secret codes.
Links - Enigma Museum
History of the German naval Enigma machine and detailed information regarding German U-boat history. http://uboat.net/technical/enigma_breaking.htm A great collection of information on the …
Events - Enigma Museum
Enigma Museum will be hosting the Fifth Annual Enigma Forum in Friedrichshafen, Germany on July 14-16, 2017. We will be joined by collectors and historians from around the world and will have a display of cipher equipment in the exhibit hall and be presenting a seminar.