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Implosion is one of the fundamental processes behind nature. The Austrian Viktor Schauberger, the father of implosion technology saw implosion as the life generating principle and explosion as the life degenerating principle (Coats, 1996).
We all know that explosion is a sudden
expansion of matter. Fuel, for instance, is exploded in our car
engines, which is what makes them go. So, what is implosion? Implosion is a suctional process that causes
matter to move inwards, not outwards as is the case with explosion.
This inward (centripetal) motion, however, does not follow a straight
(radial) path to the centre; it follows a spiralling, whirling path.
This is called a vortex and it is the secret of nature.
A characteristic feature of a vortex
is that the outside of the vortex moves slowly and the centre moves
fast. As water is imploded in a vortex, suspended particles, which are
denser than water, are sucked into the centre of flow, frictional
resistance is reduced and the speed of the flow is increased.

The vortex motion, which also causes a drop in temperature and an increase in density, is paramount for water to stay healthy and disease free.
Viktor Schauberger’s idea and explanations regarding implosion, however, go further than the physical vortex phenomenon. He was a very sensitive man, gifted with an intuitive insight into the subtle reality that lies beyond our senses. He realised that the physical vortex motion he observed everywhere in nature is the result of etheric energy dynamics caused by the interplay of Cosmic and Earth energies.
What he was trying to express was that there is a causative, energetic reality at work in Nature. What we see in the physical world as material objects and motions are merely expressions and reactions to these etheric dynamics. Needless to say, these etheric dynamics follow vortex paths. For water to stay healthy, it needs to be allowed to exercise its preordained spiralling motion, which enables it to tune itself to the Cosmos and to stay energetically charged.
Viktor Schauberger proposed a system of mechanical vortexing of water in egg shaped vessels as a means of re- energising and revitalising water; the action of the vortex also has a ‘retuning’ effect on the molecular cluster structure of water, erasing detrimental informational patterns.
After researching Viktor Schauberger for a couple of years the researchers at the Centre for Implsion Research were convinced that they had been on the right track. They started their full time research in September 1997 and developed an implosion machine.