Henry Stevens - Hitler's Flying Saucers - A Guide To German Flying Discs of The Second World War New Edition (2013, Adventures Unlimited Press) - Libgen - lc-116-120
Henry Stevens - Hitler's Flying Saucers - A Guide To German Flying Discs of The Second World War New Edition (2013, Adventures Unlimited Press) - Libgen - lc-116-120
Henry Stevens - Hitler's Flying Saucers - A Guide To German Flying Discs of The Second World War New Edition (2013, Adventures Unlimited Press) - Libgen - lc-116-120
and more air as the reaction continued. Greater air speed at the point of
ejection also served to lower the pressure as explained in Bernouli’s Law
(the same process which makes an airplane wing lift the aircraft), thus
helping to lowering pressure at the inlet.
So to review: air is drawn in one end of the machine by an electric-
powered, paddle-like fan or by spinning the entire machine as was the case
with the saucer model. Air is then spiraled into a vortex of special
proportion and shape designed by Schauberger. The air is made more dense
yet cooled as it funnels down to its smallest diameter. At this point, just
before expansive forces take over, energy is liberated perhaps due to the un-
gluing of sub-atomic forces which frees energy in some manner currently
imperfectly understood. The air begins to expand in a centrifugal motion as
it warms. It is at this midway point that the air exits the saucer model at its
periphery or lip of the saucer to expand centrifugally in the open
atmosphere. Once a speed of 10,000 to 20,000 revolutions per minute is
attained, the machine auto-rotates without need of the small electric-
powered starter motor.
Viktor Schauberger’s Saucer Models
Top: Schauberger models. Bottom: Sectional diagram. The zig-zag is the air
passage. The passage is a hollow space between two plates. As the saucer
spins on its axis, the air enters and moves away from the center towards the
rim following the up and down flow of the zig-zag. The spin causes
individual tornado-like vorices to form as the spin causes the air flow to
fold over on itself as it moves outward. Vortices become smaller in diameter
and more “densified” until they reach the rim where they are released into
the atmosphere, rapidly expand, and yield energy. Model is mulit-section,
copper. Courtesy Klaus-Peter Rothkugel.