Super Imploder
A magnetic water-treatment device — eight ~3,000-gauss neodymium magnets in a 'coherently directed' array — marketed for agriculture and home use, the most commercially conventional of Dan Winter's products.
- The maker states the device uses eight coherently-directed magnets at roughly 3,000 gauss each to treat water, claiming improved outcomes for hydroponic and agricultural growth and general home use (including descaling).
- The maker asserts that 'international research is clear: magnetic water treatment DOES work,' citing the general MTD (magnetic treatment device) literature rather than a device-specific trial.
- It is sold in stainless-steel nozzle housings across pricing tiers.
A real, if contested, body of agricultural/industrial literature on magnetic water treatment exists — the maker cites it generally. Whether it validates this specific device's configuration is the open question.
The maker's proprietary theory linking the magnet geometry to 'implosion' — not independently peer-reviewed, shared across his product line.
EVERY SOURCE IS NAMED SO YOU CAN VERIFY IT YOURSELF. NAMING A SOURCE IS NOT ENDORSING IT.
- The general MTD literature is mixed and contested — which specific studies used configurations comparable to the Super Imploder, and at what effect size?
- What are the actual agricultural results (yield, water use) from independent users versus the maker's claims?
- What is the current price across tiers, and how does it compare to conventional magnetic water softeners?
The Super Imploder is the most 'ordinary consumer product' in Dan Winter's ecosystem — a magnetic water-treatment device in a category (MTDs) that genuinely exists commercially, distinct from his plasma-healing devices (PhiRay, Plasmaphire) charted nearby.
It's a useful contrast within one maker's line: the same underlying theory applied to water/agriculture (a more testable, commercially-grounded domain) rather than to human healing.
SOURCE: fractalfield.com/superimploder (scraped 2026-07-09)
What are real agricultural results from independent users, and current pricing?
The maker cites general MTD literature, not device-specific trials; the Atlas is collecting independent grower results and current tier pricing.
Report from the field →PhiRay
A $6,900 plasma-and-magnetic-field device marketed as the direct replacement for the maker's earlier Theraphi system — claimed to be 2–4x more powerful at roughly a quarter of the cost.
Piezo Phire
The most affordable device in the Implosion Group line (700 EUR) — a piezo-based localized 'implosive charge' unit launched at the maker's own FractalU conference.
Plasmaphire
A battery-powered, portable pair of plasma spheres (2,500 EUR) explicitly marketed by its own maker as 'experimental' and unable to make medical claims — designed for use away from mains power, including outdoors.