Changing sample types is a good moment to pause. A flat card, a coated tag, a wood piece, and a curved gift object can each bring different setup questions. The safety reset between them should be visible, not assumed.
For AntBelt G1 users and campaign followers, visible safety habits are part of the workflow story. Keep protective eyewear, shielding, ventilation, attended operation, and material review in the same routine as the sample notes. Do not treat safety as a paragraph at the end after the creative work is already decided.
A practical reset can be short:
- Clear the previous sample.
- Confirm the next blank and artwork note.
- Check ventilation and shielding.
- Keep the work attended.
- Let the sample cool or rest when appropriate before handling.
The point is not to make every small test slow. The point is to prevent momentum from skipping a necessary check. If the sample type changes, the operator should briefly reset the bench and the note.
Campaign readers should also look for this distinction in public updates. A strong sample workflow explains what is visible, what is still being reviewed, and what safety assumptions users should not skip.
