This page has been compiled from various primary sources for the Dayton story. Each fact is sourced, and many of the sources are reproduced on this site.
| 1 August 1944 | 400 |
| 1 January 1945 | 238 |
| 15 March 1945 | 182 |
| 1 June 1945 | 114 |
NCR Co. designed, developed, fabricated, and put into operation the following equipments. (Meader, Records of INS)
| Machine nickname | # manufactured | language used for and additional info |
|---|---|---|
| Copperheads I | 5 Scanners | Japanese JN-25, tape scanner |
| 6 Punches | ||
| Vipers | 10 | Japanese 157 cipher |
| Mike | 1 | takes data from 2 teletype machines simultaneously |
| Pythons | 6 | Japanese: Naval Attache code |
| Rattler | 3 | Japanese: 157 cipher |
| Gypsy-Topas (sic) | 2 | |
| Duenna | 5 | Enigma: added pluggable reflector |
| Statistical Bombe | 1 | Research on equipment which would not need a crib |
| Double Bombe | 1 | Enigma: handles double encipherment |
| Asp | 1 | |
| Sliding Grenade | 2 | cuts Grenade ruuning time by a factor of 26 |
| M-9 | 60 | hand machine to test Bombe results |
| (506 extra wheels) | ||
| M-8 | 8 | carries out decipherment from punched tape |
| Parallel Grenade | 1 | runs 4 standard Grenades simulaneously |
| Mamba | 1 | Japanese: device to aid in recovery of additive ciphers |
| Wave filters | 30 | |
| Boa | 60 | Enigma:pluggable reflector used in M-9 |
| Special Boa's for Duenna | 10 | Enigma |
| Satyr | 1 | |
| Pluggable Reflectors | 495 | Enigma: Bombes equipped to handle rapid reflector changes |
| Standard Grenades | 4 | Enigma: Bombe attachment |
| Drag Grenade | 1 | Enigma: applies a short crib to 13 positions simultaneously |
| Coast Guard Grenade | 1 | solves double encipherment problems |
| Cilli Grenade | 1 | simultaneously runs several wheel orders |
| Inverted Bombes | 8 | converts Bombe wiring for days when wheel order and rings are known but not stecker |
|
Bombes modified
for double input |
25 | modification on 25 Bombes to run certain weaker cribs |
|
Special Cryptographic
model for DNC |
25 | "special cryptographic project assigned by the Director of Naval Communications" |
| Squelcher Circuit | special selective circuit |
The magnitude of the above equipments is a matter of record and need not be amplified here, other than to give one example. One Duenna contained 2,000 relays and 3,000 tubes. In the overall performance at Dayton, over 200,000 items were shipped to Washington from Dayton. Some 56 carloads weighing 17 tons each were sent. (Meader, Records of INS)
Regarding the work on a Japanese strip cipher: "A project was initiated on 16 December 1944 to build a machine which would accomplish the complicated process of decipherment directly from a keyboard to a page copy. This equipment involves over 1,000 relays, 50,000 soldered connections, stepping switches, controls, etc. Less than 30 days elapsed between the original inception of the project and the completion of the equipment which is now in operation in our Pacific section. Original rough designs were prepared by our research group. The equipment was designed, fabricated, wired, and assembled by naval personnel attached to the U.S. Naval Computing Machine Laboratory, Dayton, Ohio."(Commendation, Joseph Wenger, 15 Jan 1945)
Research and development work continued in Dayton until 15 August 1946. The work moved then to Engineering Research Associates, a quasi-governmental organization founded by Naval Officers Engstrom, Meader and Norris. It was located in Minneapolis/St. Paul. Bill Norris of ERA later morphed this company into Control Data Corporation which was an industry leader in computing for many years and is an essential member of the "family tree" of computer development.
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