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The Schauberger engine is a myth or a reality?

To the majority of inhabitants the name of Viktor Schauberger has little to say about. And it was this modest inventor from Austria that opened a practically new era in technology, leaving behind a rich heritage, enveloped in a halo of mystery and concealing more questions than answers. The nature of his discoveries can not be fully understood until now. And all attempts to assemble the Schauberger engine with their own hands or in the laboratory do not achieve the effect that its creator had.

Victor Schauberger was a hereditary forester. Not having a special technical education, but possessing natural wit and observation, considering how the water moves in the forest streams, Schauberger came to an interesting conclusion, in effect redoing the discovery, which before him was known to the ancient Egyptians, the Greek, the Incas. Namely: in mountain rivers, thanks to a natural twist, water not only self-cleaning, but also receives additional energy. Twisting, water can flow from the bottom up. After all, for example, salmon and trout, heading to the spawning site, easily overcome the rapids with a height of up to 10 m, although this requires a remarkable physical strength. It was thanks to the twists that the water rose, for example, to the Knossos Palace on Crete without any pumps.

As a result, in 1921 the first Schauberger engine was created. It was a suction turbine in which water, twisting, rose upwards in the direction of the converging nozzle, while increasing its energy. Water was the fuel for this engine.

And in 1930, he invented the first vortex heat generator, the heat in which was produced by the energy of the rotating water.

The developments of the Austrian inventor-self-taught could not but interest the Nazis.

In 1934 Schauberger met with Hitler. In the course of the conversation, dealing mainly with agricultural problems, the Fuhrer was interested in the engine of Schauberger working on the water , and the dictator offered cooperation, having received a refusal. The consequences of this meeting had unpleasant consequences for the inventor. After the annexation of Germany by Austria in 1938, the Nazis made every effort to search for Schauberger. First, the naturalist was placed in a psychiatric clinic, and then worked on creating a disk vortex engine under the supervision of SS men in the concentration camp of Mauthausen, as we said - in the "sharaga".

The first Schauberger engine, called Repulsin A with a diameter of 2.4 m, exploded during the tests, which almost cost the life of its creator, accused of sabotage. The next model, Repulsin B, proved to be more successful.

Initially, Schauberger's engine was planned to be installed on submarines, but later the Flugkreisel ("Flying Yule") aircraft resembled a flying saucer. The first prototype of this device was launched in 1943. The "plates" were refined until the end of the war. After the defeat of Germany, Schauberger's engine fell into the hands of the winners, and its creator was invited to work in the Canadian branch of the British company AVRO. But Schauberger chose to devote the rest of his life to the use of vortex technologies in the name of peace (the creation of generators, systems for cleaning water and air).

Literally on the eve of his death, Victor Schauberger received several tempting proposals, which he, as a deeply decent man, were rejected, since he did not want his inventions to serve the war. It is for this reason that the vortex engine of Victor Schauberger practically never found wide application.

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