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200 <strong>Suppressed</strong> <strong>Inventions</strong> <strong>and</strong> Other <strong>Discoveries</strong><br />

Walter's scepticism crumbled during the experiments they conducted.<br />

Walter contributed useful techniques himself, <strong>and</strong> the duo were soon<br />

extracting 50,000 volts from fine jets <strong>of</strong> water at low pressures. A physicist<br />

from a nearby technical college came; his first action was to search<br />

for hidden wires. When he could find none, he lost his temper <strong>and</strong> asked<br />

Walter where he had hidden the electrical leads. Eventually he had to<br />

admit that there was no trick involved; the experiment was valid.<br />

However, he could not explain such a high charge from water.<br />

The Second World War interrupted their experiments, <strong>and</strong> Walter [was]<br />

drafted. Viktor was ordered to undergo a physical examination supposedly<br />

related to his forthcoming pension. However, says biographer<br />

Alex<strong>and</strong>ersson, "it looked like an engineering <strong>and</strong> architectural association<br />

was behind this dem<strong>and</strong> for a check-up."<br />

Viktor Schauberger unsuspectingly showed up, but was whisked away<br />

to an<strong>other</strong> clinic. He was told it was for a special exam, but to his horror<br />

he found himself being questioned in a psychiatric clinic. He forced himself<br />

to answer the questions in a peaceful non-abrasive way; if he displayed<br />

anger he might be locked up. Two doctors tested him <strong>and</strong> found<br />

him perfectly sane as well as highly intelligent. They never found out who<br />

had arranged to get him into the mental hospital.<br />

"BUILD MACHINES, OR DIE"<br />

He himself was drafted in 1943, despite his age. After a brief stint as comm<strong>and</strong>er<br />

<strong>of</strong> a parachute group in Italy, he was ordered by Himmler [Hitler's<br />

chief lieutenant] to the Mauthausen concentration camp. Himmler's greeting,<br />

passed on by the camp's military leader, gave him a choice—death by<br />

hanging, or develop machines which used the energy he had discovered.<br />

He was told to lead a scientific team <strong>of</strong> the best engineers <strong>and</strong> stress-analysts<br />

from among the prisoners.<br />

The work was based on Schauberger's discovery <strong>of</strong> how to develop<br />

a low-pressure zone at the atomic level. This had happened in seconds<br />

when his laboratory device whirled air or water "radially <strong>and</strong> axially"<br />

at a falling temperature. He referred to the resulting force as diamagnetic<br />

levitation power. He emphasized that nature uses indirect—what<br />

Schauberger called reactionary—suction force.<br />

He insisted that the technical team from the concentration camp be<br />

treated as free men would. After their research headquarters was bombed,<br />

they were transferred to Leonstein <strong>and</strong> started a flying disc project to be<br />

powered with his trout-inspired turbine which rotated air into a twisting<br />

type <strong>of</strong> oscillation resulting in a buildup <strong>of</strong> immense power causing levitation.<br />

A small model which crashed against the ceiling glowed blue-green<br />

at first as it rose, then trailed a silvery glow.

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