The best time to write a safety note is before the next blank goes on the work area. That is when the operator still remembers what was used, how the setup was attended, and what should be changed before another test.
For AntBelt G1 content, the note should stay practical: identify the blank, record the ventilation or workspace reminder, and state whether the result needs another controlled sample. Unknown plastics and uncertain materials should be treated cautiously rather than turned into beginner recommendations.
This does not need to become a long document. A short note beside each sample can keep the workflow disciplined and make later photos easier to interpret.
Public updates are stronger when safety language is close to the sample instead of buried elsewhere. It tells readers that the test is being treated as a careful workflow, not as casual decoration.
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