Turntable Mats: Rubber, Felt or Cork.


I have a Linn Basik Turntable with an Akito tonearm and Rega Exacta 2 cartridge. Would one expect a noticeable sonic difference when changing from a felt mat to a rubber and cork mat?
joscow
I guess you failed to remember @ noromance list of his personal mats and their benefit. 

This was early on in this very thread.

Like I said, I have nothing to prove.
@chakster,

Let us all read personal remarks about the mats you are high on. I've done that. You????
I don’t have any of the mentioned mats and so ( as I would about ANY unheard product ) feel comments about an unheard product other than aesthetics or some other non-sonic feature are close to worthless.

obviously a wide sample of mats would / could be a fairly significant investment and require many hours of listening.

personally, I praise Steve for creating something new which more than a few people enjoy :-) how wonderful is that!

enjoy the music!

my primary table is a Bardo with a uniquely engineered platter and clamping system.
noromance,  what is a PAC aluminum platter?  Nothing comes to mind for those initials.

Could it be any aluminum platter, like one of the Technics, or a specific one?

Thanks
In my opinion, platter mats are like seasoning of very fine food.  Each palate will react differently to one particular choice or another.  And fish requires different seasoning compared to beef stew. Although each of us like to think of ourselves as a searcher for the Absolute Sound, and although most of us believe that such a Holy Grail actually exists, I think in fact we are all prisoners of our own senses and biases.  Therefore, I would make no definitive pronouncement on what is the "best" mat, although I think we can all agree that rubber mats, and maybe also rubbery mats, are not so great (to put it as diplomatically as possible).  Also, within this argument about mats there is a minority who prefer to elevate the LP above the platter (e.g., the much loved Resomat), which is like saying they prefer no mat at all. So this is why I am not blown away that Noromance does not like the Boston Audio mats (whereas I do) or that someone else doesn't like metal mats of any type, or etc.  Likewise, I would have to try Slaw's mat for myself before giving it a thumbs up or down.  I am by the way, blown away by Noromance's ability to give precise numerical rankings in 4 categories for each of about a half dozen mats, especially since in every category, all the mats ranked >5, on a 1 to 10 scale.  So the rankings are really on a 1 to 5 scale.  Seems to me the nature of the platter itself, of the drive system, and of the other elements of the turntable, tonearm, and cartridge are critical co-determinants of the end result.  So Noromance's rankings are only relevant to his turntable, tonearm, and cartridge, not to mention his phono stage/amplifier/speakers/room.