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The Swiss NEMA is an electro-mechanical wheel-based cipher machine that was developed by Zellweger AG in Uster Switzerland during World War II as a replacement for the German Enigma model K that was being used by the Swiss Army.
- Dynamic and Rare Battlefield-Found Relic Enigma Machine
Historic battlefield-found, relic Enigma machine for sale....
- M-125 Russian Fialka Cipher Machine
This Russian cipher machine, code named “Fialka,” was...
- M-125 Russian Fialka Rotor Set
An exciting and rare example of cold war-era cipher...
- Swiss NEMA
Swiss NEMA cipher machine. This is a complete and original...
- Enigma Rotor A5350
This is Enigma rotor number III with Serial Number A5350....
- Sold
The indexing arm allowed the number ring to be rotated to...
- Set of 3 Matching Enigma Rotors
This is a set of three original Enigma rotors from a 3-rotor...
- Restored 3-Rotor Enigma A16878
Own this rare and important piece of WWII and computer...
- Dynamic and Rare Battlefield-Found Relic Enigma Machine
Jan 12, 2021 · An almost completely corroded “Enigma I” cipher machine, with three rotors for army and air force, used during the late 1930s and during the war; sold at auction for $50,750. Courtesy of Hermann Historica.
Own this rare and important piece of WWII and computer history. This is a complete, restored, museum-quality WWII German Enigma machine in excellent working condition. This model Enigma machine was the primary cipher machine for the German military from 1932 through 1945.
Sep 7, 2022 · This is a rare Heimsoeth und Rinke 3-rotor Enigma machine from 1938, just a year before the start of WWII. The Enigma is an encryption device that looks a little like a typewriter, it was developed by the Germans and used by all three branches of the German military during WWII.
Sold for $206,253 | Fantastic World War II-era, fully operational three-rotor Enigma I electromechanical cipher machine made for the German military in Munich.
Ultra-desirable, fully functional World War II-era three-rotor Enigma I electromechanical cipher machine built for the German military by Heimsoeth and Rinke in Berlin in 1943. Based on the chassis of the commercial Enigma D, the Enigma I machine was the standard Enigma machine used by the German military throughout the war.
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NEW YORK – One of the rarest of all Enigma Machines, the M4, designed for use by the German Navy during World War II, was sold today (7 December) for $463,500 at Bonhams History of Science and Technology Sale in New York.