Players/Cymatic Substrate Network Viktor Schauberger
Fluidic cymatics and implosion dynamics
Austrian forester / engineer (1885–1958) who rejected explosive combustion in favor of nature's generative implosion. Schauberger's Repulsine devices used rotating discs with spiral channels to force water and air into high-speed vortex flows, creating localized diamagnetic and levitation effects through manipulation of structural constraints. His work demonstrates that geometric channels can sculpt fluid substrate into levitational natural resonance patterns — fluidic cymatics applied to propulsion.
The captured-research thread. Schauberger was conscripted by the SS during WWII and his designs were ingested into the same Reichsdeutsche aerospace pipeline that fed Operation Paperclip's post-war American intake. The 1947 peak-stress moment concept page documents the institutional cluster that absorbed this work. Schauberger himself died in 1958 shortly after a contested American-corporate visit; primary-source materials remain scattered.
Engine framework projected: Cymatic Substrate / centralized power structure (captured-tech lineage). Cross-references: Walter Russell (parallel macro-cymatic cosmology), Operation Paperclip cluster within the 1947 peak-stress moment.
Also in Cymatic Substrate Network