I think sourcing the sandpaper is actually the absolute easiest piece of this entire endeavour. It doesn't have to be one continuous sheet anyway. You could probably buy a couple of pretty wide rolls wholesale.
I think sourcing the sandpaper is actually the absolute easiest piece of this entire endeavour. It d
having edges where the rolls meet or overlap gives a weakpoint for the victim to exploit if you can get at an edge you can tear some off or push it back and make a safe strip where you can rest on the bare rollers, or depeneding on the setup even get down through a gap
having edges where the rolls meet or overlap gives a weakpoint for the victim to exploit if you can
I think that's a flaw with sandpaper itself, not with the edges. Might be a tad more difficult without overlaps, but probably only a minor difficulty. Although what I think would be most effective, if you simply take the conveyor itself and glue the sand directly on the surface, or at the very least use something more tear-resistant than store quality sandpaper, like a tarpaulin coated with the coarse material.
I think that's a flaw with sandpaper itself, not with the edges. Might be a tad more difficult witho
The solution would probably be to instead coat the rollers themselves with epoxy & sand, making backup sandpaper. Then connect them via a gear train along the side so they always spin regardless if the loop is damaged or not.
The solution would probably be to instead coat the rollers themselves with epoxy & sand, making back