Viktor Stepanovich Grebennikov

was a self-proclaimed Russian scientist, naturalist, entomologist and paranormal researcher best known for his claim to have invented a levitation platform which operated by attaching dead insect body parts to the underside.

Grebennikov wrote detailed accounts of his experiences flying over the Russian countryside using his levitation device. These flying experiences as well as his reported observations of other paranormal phenomena, usually involving insect nests or parts, appear in his self-published book My World.

In 1988 he found out antigravitational effects ofchitinous covers some insects species. But the most astonishingattendant phenomenon associated with antigravity was aphenomenon overall either partial invisibility or deformedvisual perception of the material object which was located in azone of compensated gravitation.

He was granted a Russian patent in 1993 on a device containing beehive cells (dry honeycomb) that is claimed to enhance the effectiveness of therapeutic drugs in a patient. The top part is a Ranque-Hilsch tube, this mastil let the air flow through causing high speed rotating kinetic energy and allows straightforward thermal flow and inverse thermal flow too. The great temperature difference maintained across the mastil extremes produces high efficiency energy that cancel gravity through fluid kinetic energy. The platform inset on the base has the form of the vorticity tridimentional vectorial camp.

  • His mother was a noblewoman, his father was a mechanic. In 1976, he founded the Museum of Agroecology and Environmental Protection.
  • Grebennikov wrote detailed accounts of his experiences flying over the Russian countryside using his levitation device.
  • Born in Russia on 23 April 1927 in Simferopol – 2001 in Novosibirsk. Viktor S. Grebennikov died in the spring of 2001.