Schauberger: The Implosion Engineer Erased from Physics
- nvtvptpenrose
- Oct 15
- 3 min read
Viktor Schauberger was a witness to a science that was silenced. He watched water spiral through untouched rivers with a certain rhythm. Where science saw turbulence, he saw intention. Where engineers built turbines to tear water apart, he built chambers to let it dance. He believed nature never explodes but implodes. He believed if you mirrored inward motion, there would reveal secrets. He built devices powered by vortexes; chambers where air or water spun into implosive harmony. Some called it pseudoscience. Others watched his machines hover. There are reports; observers, both German and Allied, who witnessed brief moments where metal became weightless through implosion technology, which is the collapse of structure into inward acceleration. A reversal of the known laws. Then… he was taken. We must be clear, he was not abducted. Rather, he was absorbed by the machine he thought he could change, recruited by Nazi engineers under duress then later interrogated by American agents. Patents filed, notebooks seized, devices vanished. The man who showed us how to levitate with water died in poverty, and totally forgotten. The textbooks do not mention him. The physics departments laugh at his name, and no student today learns the principle of implosion. That’s not accidental.



