Flat blanks and curved surfaces should not be mixed into the same test note. AntBelt supports cylindrical engraving, but a curved object introduces different setup questions than a card, tag, or flat sample board.

A practical habit is to keep a separate curved-surface log. Note the object type in general terms, photograph the setup, record the artwork boundary, and keep the result beside the flat-sample notes without treating them as the same test.

This wording matters. A visible curved sample can be useful, but it should not become a promise about final rotary accessory specs, object dimensions, material guarantees, throughput, or shipping details. Final details belong on the Kickstarter page.

For makers and small shops, the value of a separate log is simple: it keeps comparison fair. A flat tag test can answer one question, while a cylindrical test answers another.

Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder and final reward details: