Material samples are easier to trust when the label is clear before the claim is written. A sample without a label can look persuasive, but it may not tell the viewer what blank was tested, what question was being asked, or whether the result is ready for public use.
AntBelt G1 launch content should stay careful about this distinction. A visible sample can support a workflow story, while final claims about durability, finish quality, or production consistency need stronger evidence.
A practical material label can record:
- The blank type in ordinary language.
- The date of the sample photo.
- The question the test was meant to answer.
- Whether the result is a reference, a reject, or a candidate.
This keeps the sample useful without turning it into a certificate. It also makes future comparison easier because each photo has a reason attached to it.
For more sample-test articles, see /updates/.
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