Got a Supermax 16-32 and so far, I'm not completely happy with the Supermax rolls that I got with it. Not completely unhappy, but I don't like it. Seems like it stretches too much. TO be fair, when I use it, I use it like I stole it, and will run it for 4-8 hours per day, for 2-3 days, about every 6 weeks (that's just how I do projects, I spend a weekend or 2 milling and facing my wood then two months trying to remember what each piece is for). When I built my sharpening station, I got, for a very good price, many rolls of various grits that just so happened to be adhesive backed. Is sticking this on my Supermax going to destroy it? My intent is to cut the paper using the template, same length, and use the securing clips at either end of the drum (I'm NOT trying to avoid using the clips). Or in other words, I want to get some use out of the several hundred feet of adhesive backed I have that I'll never use for anything else (including other sanding projects, I anticipated the sandpaper shortage at the beginning of COvid and planned appropriately, perhaps contributing, significantly, to the sandpaper shortage ). I feel like I can remove the residue off the drum between changes of this paper, or is there some sort of physics going on with drum sanders that permanently bonds the adhesive to the drum, perhaps due to heat? Centrifugal force?