The Frontier Atlas
VECTOR: MAGNETIC WATER TREATMENTImplosion Group (international)Dan Winter / Implosion Group

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.

2 SOURCES CITED
CLAIMED — WHAT THE MAKER STATES
  • 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.
CITED SOURCES — NAMED, NOT ADJUDICATED
Magnetic water treatment (MTD) research literature

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.

Dan Winter's implosion/phase-conjugation framework

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.

OPEN QUESTIONS — NOT YET RESOLVED
  • 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?
FIELD NOTE

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)

THE DATA POINT — WHAT THE ATLAS IS COLLECTING

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 →