Herbie’s Super Black Hole CD Mat - Wow!


I just received the Herbie’s Audio Lab Super Black Hole CD mat in mail. It’s a little black disc that fits atop a CD which has silicon on one side (the side that touches the CD) and carbon fiber on the top. I’ve only listened to a few songs (electronic genre) and my first impression was simply “Wow!” I’m hearing so much further into the recording. I’m hearing the ambience much better. Notes have more texture. Imaging seems to have improved. On one track, there is a sound that is panned to the right and repeats three times. I thought it was identical on each note, but with the CD mat it’s easy to hear that on the second note, it actually moves 6 inches towards the center of the soundstage and then back out to the right. It’s always fun to rediscover your music when you find a tweak you enjoy. 
From their website, this is how they say it works:

“By reducing micro-vibration in the CD spin during playback, laser-reading error is potentially reduced. (Error correction in audio CD discs is not perfect; it is algorithm-based "guessing," not binary like in data CDs). By damping the disc/clamp interface, micro-vibrations generated by spinning discs are hindered, keeping them from permeating throughout the player where capacitors, op-amps, micro-processors, and other sensitive parts can be adversely affected.”

I can’t confirm whether or not that’s the whole story to how it works, but I’m convinced it does something amazing. I will report back after I listen to some more music of other genres.
128x128mkgus
Is there a measurable difference on these? 
I’ve worked with all wavelengths. 
Diode pumped, Q-Switched, mode locked, femtosecond 1053nm for the last 14 years. 

I can think of several ways to eliminate this stray “light” from a manufacturer standpoint if it’s truly an issue. 

I like to enjoy music though and not worry too much about measuring stuff so maybe you have something here. 
Chris
laserjock1963
I can think of several ways to eliminate this stray “light” from a manufacturer standpoint if it’s truly an issue.

>>>>>I’m all ears.


My CD treatments include:
1. Sanding the outer and inner edge with sandpaper to reduce shine and reflection.
2. Black the outer and inner edge and the entire top of the CD with flat black opaque paint marker.
3. Apply Ultra bit Platinum Plus to both sides of the disc.
4. Use Herbies Mat.
5. Zap the disc with the now discontinued Mapleshade Ionoclast (like a Zerostat)....removes static.....very, very important...unfortunately, the effect only last 10 minutes of play time.
6. Damp the CD clamp in the player with EAR SD40AL damping material (round with hole in middle).
7. Paint the CD tray with flat black opaque paint.
My CD treatments are classified. New Dark Matter and the Mystery Tweak. 🤫 Hint - the CD laser is not (rpt not) red. BLACK is very tricky and can do more harm than good.
My friend Robert came over last night and we gave the Herbie's "Super Black Hole CD Mat" a workout. We a/b/a tested a number of CDs. In each case, the Herbie's mat degraded the sound. It had a dulling effect, in that the highs were obscured, and a veil was placed over the entire presentation.  It took the life out of the music. 

I was somewhat disappointed, in that, I'm using Herbie's tube dampeners throughout the system, and Herbie's feet under the CD player, both to good effect. I'm a big fan of Herbie's tube dampeners. 

Frank