My experiences with carbon matt:
For a number of years, I have had satisfactory results with the .02 oz carbon matt. Starting with bare wood (like the fuselage and the outside surface of a cowl), I apply about 3 coats of nitrate thinned to maybe 50%. Then apply the carbon matt with more nitrate, still thinned. The stuff goes around compound curves extremely well. Then apply 3 or 4 coats of more thinned nitrate before any sanding. Then sand until the dark black disappears and turns grey. Apply several more coats of thinned nitrate, sanding after each coat until a there is a uniform, smooth surface, then use whatever finishing technique after that to fill pinholes and some irregularities that might still appear on the surface of the matt.
One neat thing about using nitrate as a base coat, it sticks to fillets and will NOT blister like butyrate dope will when butyrate is first applied to fillets.
Another thing about the nitrate as a base cote, it gives a harder "egg shell" surface instead of the more plastic surface that a butyrate clear base provides
The carbon matt is intended as a laminating material between two pieces of material, in our case like balsa. It serves that purpose well. It will certainly increase the stiffness of components laminating for instance two pieces of 1/16" balsa, cross grain to get a significant improvement in stiffness, depending on the size of the component, either CA can be used to bond the pieces of for larger pieces, finishing resin, applied very sparingly works well.
I have not found much use for the .05 oz carbon matt for the models. Maybe it would be good for larger laminated pieces.
Just my thoughts.
Keith