"Her rating is established at 130 and she has just kept on winning by big spaces," Carpenter said. "She does it so effortlessly and she runs time."
Her winning time was just 1.16 seconds outside the track record after she cantered through the first 200 metres in 14.11s before reeling off four sub-11 second sectionals including 10.44s between the 600m and 400m.
She was eased down the last 200 metres in 11.69s.
Trainer Peter Moody was thrilled for himself and the connections, as well as the crowd which erupted as Black Caviar approached the grandstands rolling along.
"She's a got the job done for us again and it's a great relief to see her do it again," Moody said. "They are all Group horses behind her but once again she's toyed with them."
Moody said he and the owners would decide tomorrow whether Black Caviar would have her campaign finale in the Group One $1 million Winterbottom Stakes (1200m) at Ascot on November 19.
Moody said she was booked to fly to Perth on Tuesday night, all being well.
Jockey Luke Nolen described Black Caviar's latest victory as "pretty effortless".
"She was in control of the race a long way out."
Buffering's trainer Rob Heathcote, like everyone else at Flemington, was in awe of Black Caviar as she raced to her seventh Group One win and took her earnings to $4,380,050.
"I feel like I've won," Heathcote said. "At the end of the day the plan was to come here and run second to Black Caviar."
Buffering earned the biggest pay cheque of his career, with his $180,000 second prize taking his career stakes to more than $1 million.
-AAP