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

Alright @oregonpapa, now you HAVE gone too far, disparaging my blended Johnnie Walker Black like that. :-(

But Geoff came to the rescue, making me laugh out loud for the first time in quite a while (the donkey joke). :-)

Back on topic: Audiogoner folkfreak's Portland Oregon system was (he has packed up and left town) extensively fitted with Synergistic Research grounding products, and the "silence"/"blackness" of the sound that system displayed was really something to hear.

If the PPT products afford that kind of benefit, even I, with a fairly pronounced case of tinnitus (producing an elevated ambient noise floor in my ears), may hear a difference. Mt neighborhood's power station is only a half-mile way from the house, with no industry or other noise-producing sources in the area, and I hear no obvious problems in that regard. But with all the electronic signals flying around in just about all homes these days, who knows what's on the line and in the air to be picked up? Sometimes you aren't aware of pollutants in the sound until they are removed.

If you are in North America, they what is supplied to houses is split-phase 120/240. It is technically not a true two-phase system but usually referred to as such. What it is is a 240V center-tapped transformer on the pole, then 3 wires are run to the breaker panel, two lives, and the neutral. Almost all audio equipment I am aware of in North America is 120V, which means you are only connecting to 1/2 the windings on the pole transformer at at time.

Noise reduction and surge equipment only attached to 1/2 the transformer will have some effect on the other side of the transformer, but the speed/bandwidth of that effect is limited as the bandwidth of that large pole/neighbourhood transformer is low. Power-Factor applied to only one side of the transformer can work, is not as effective, but as was noted above, to achieve power factor correction, it takes more sophistication.

jafreeman OP519 posts11-24-2019 8:22pm"The way it is hooked up is pretty clear. It only connects to one phase. That means the benefit it can have on the other phase is limited. That is simple reality." at david

Atdavid, is you system powered by more than one phase in your box?

Before cars had antenna wires in their windshields--back around 1970--I would pick up a winter beater--or a daily beater--for around $200.  These cars usually lacked antennas---snapped off at the fender long before.  I would stick a coat hanger in there--then got good radio reception---I'm sure many of you did the same.  It seems any piece of wire also makes a good antenna for broadcast, so you can imagine what 300-400 feet of copper wire does in your house, not to mention the wiring in and between your components.  What are your thoughts on this, folks?               
So if you had an AV system at a remote lake house off the grid away from them towers and powered by a generator or even solar and battery I still think the Mat the Card and the Gate will make a big difference. I think there is more to it than RFI/EMI...

Total Contact maybe a surface treatment for contacts but it also serves many passive surfaces well. Speaker frames..tweeter bezels, mechanical fasteners and screws..and some parts of musical instruments. The treated part or device also goes thru a period of breakin until the materials is cured to the surface. Easily heard just by treating the screws on your speaker..make sure you switch to brass at least around and on the tweeter. Frank heard the benefit of treating the screens around his ribbon tweeters with Total Contact just as Tim did. I think I know why and it has nothing to do with RFI..unless string instruments are subject to RFI..Tom
Post removed