New Omega E Mat from Perfect Path Technologies


Many of you own or have read of the highly-regarded PPT Omega E Mat, one of Tim Mrock’s revolutionary signal-enhancing accessories. Just prior to his untimely passing, Tim had finished developing a new generation of his Omega mat, soon to be available. Krissy Mrock has asked a few of us to introduce this new mat, here given the working title of The Double Omega.

In distinguishing the Double Omega, we know the original Omega, herein called the single, as a 7.5” by 10”, rather heavy and somewhat pliable mat, a bit more than 1/8” thick and with a vinyl-like feel. One face is glossy white, displaying the PPT logo and Omega name, while the other is black, smooth and magnetized. Sandwiched between these faces is the active material that causes components to reject the EMI that saturates everything in our surroundings. The Double Omega is much the same, with one important difference: the magnetized face has the finely-textured feel of around, say, 220-grit sandpaper. This texture, it is presumed, comprises yet a second active layer of EMI rejection. Presumed—because working details of the Double Omega are not well understood—better yet to know how to apply it.

With the understanding that the single Omega E mats generate field effects from both faces, mats have typically been placed under and over components and vertically over circuit breakers. How you apply the Double Omega will depend on best use and experimentation. In my case, I have removed two single mats, lying side-by-side, from the top of my large Wadia CDP and have replaced those with two Double Omegas. The Wadia is a one-box player that contains a pre-amp, so I wanted that second, strong field effect exerting downward as well as upward. I also have several singles placed underneath, just as before. Going straight to amps, this player is my only source, so I want it fully protected from EMI. Your priorities will differ.

As of this writing, I am only thirty-hours in on placing these Double Omegas, and I can already tell you they are powerful in their prevention of EMI within my digital source. Yet another veil has been lifted—all instruments and voices are even more sorted out in the aural space with new information heard within that space. There is much more decay heard against a new silence behind and between the musicians. I am already so pleased and excited about what the Double Omega E mats are doing. As Krissy told me, Tim was really stoked to have these new mats available. Rather than wait for the the fourteen-day window of improvement, I want to get this intro out so others can relay their experiences sooner.


128x128jafreeman
oregonpapa,

If that’s your idea of "music," then a lot of questions have been answered.
When it comes to Sex Pistols, try My Way. If you cannot feel it, regardless of what you are listening to it on, the age has gotten the best of you. Publicity stunt, or not, play it loud.

When it comes to substituting guitars for saxophones, I do not have much knowledge but there were certainly great guitar players in the 1920s, if not even earlier. For whatever reason, in the places where blues was played, I do not recall ever seeing a saxophone. They might have been there, but I do not remember them. Of course, that was much much later and landscape might have changed. All of that is another topic for another time.
glupson ...

Now I know where I’ve seen you before.

You were that little nerdy guy in my high school that used to take up the post right inside the campus gate with the banner/sash across your tiny chest that read "Hall Monitor," whose job it was to report on any pimpled-faced miscreant who thought he was smart enough to get by you to sneak off campus for lunch without a pass, right?

I knew it! I’m tellin’ you ... I just knew it!

Yeppers, your choice of music should have been a strong clue, because that guy, totally into Mickey Rooney, knowing that we were really into Elizabeth Taylor, used to try to lure us over to his house when his parents weren’t home to watch his 35mm film copy of National Velvet.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZh7ckG5qEk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oB6oI04sMc4

I’m still full of it. Turkey and dressing, that is.

Frank

PS: Technicolor is like listening to a great old tube amp with your eyes. :-)
oregonpapa,

It was likely not me in your high school. Just from your stories, I am guessing I was born way after that. It is true that my home was, and still is, always open and full of people, but nobody lures them in. They come all the time, uninvited more often than not. As far as nerdy goes, well, I would rather think of it as over-educated. I barely studied, though.

Didn't you say your brother was in law enforcement? I guess, on average you are just like any other family. Every family has a black sheep.


  • "Didn't you say your brother was in law enforcement? I guess, on average you are just like any other family. Every family has a black sheep."


Oh no, Glupson ... you don't want to go there with me. That is not funny. 

Now then, did you like the technicolor film I posted for your enjoyment? 

Frank


oregonpapa,

I did not plan to go anywhere with you. I just noticed your apparent disdain for laws and remembered you said something about your, I think, brother being a detective or a police officer and always suspicious. I might have misunderstood.

Those were really some other times, if movies are representative of them. The colors were pleasant. I mean, I am relatively familiar with Technicolor. Elizabeth Taylor was a big name but I remember her mostly from the stories about being married eight times. Or something like that. One was Richard Burton. Only recently, I watched her movie with James Dean. She was good.