According to Wikipedia:
Giant Möbius strips have been used as conveyor belts that last longer because the entire surface area of the belt gets the same amount of wear...
(No citations given.) In fact, a Google search reveals that such a conveyor belt was patented by the "B. F. Goodrich Company".
For me, this raises an alarm bell. Compare the situations:
- a normal conveyor belt has wear X on one side,
- a Möbius strip conveyor belt has wear X distributed over both sides.
What difference does it make? It seems (to me) that if a Möbius strip conveyor belt had a longer life, it would only be trivially longer. (In fact, the Möbius strip design itself might increase wear and tear.)
Question: Do Möbius strip conveyor belts last (non-trivially) longer than their conventional counterparts?
Addendum: It was mentioned (thanks to cbeleites) that the linked Wikipedia page on "conveyor belts" comments:
In 1957, the B. F. Goodrich Company patented a conveyor belt that it went on to produce as the Turnover Conveyor Belt System. Incorporating a half-twist, it had the advantage over conventional belts of a longer life because it could expose all of its surface area to wear and tear. Möbius strip belts are no longer manufactured because untwisted modern belts can be made more durable by constructing them from several layers of different materials.[8]
and following the link [8]:
Incorporating a half-twist, it had the advantage over conventional belts of a longer life because it could expose all of its surface area to wear and tear. Möbius belts are no longer manufactured because untwisted modern belts can be made more durable by constructing them from several layers of different materials.
[Picture source: http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/M/Mobius_band.html]
(Meta comment: Not including these comments was simply an oversight on my part.)
A similar claim is made here:
Giant Möbius strips were once used as conveyor belts (to make them last longer, since each “side” of the strip of material gets the same amount of wear), but nowadays, better materials are available, so this isn’t necessary.
However, I still don't feel particularly satisfied with this state of affairs, as neither link provides evidence for their claims. Nor does it really address whether or not the Möbius strip design indeed saves (or did save in the past) the wear and tear (as they claim).