Remove too much sand from The End

Remove too much sand from The End - Man cleaning tropical sandy beach

I accidentally ran a sand duper in my world for about an hour, and I can't figure out how to fix it. I can't type any commands because my game freezes the second I enter the end.


How do I remove sand from the end?



Best Answer

Put a command block (repeat, unconditional, always active) in the spawn chunks that run the following:

kill @e[type=falling_block]

Hopefully, if you go into the end, all of the sand gets killed.




Pictures about "Remove too much sand from The End"

Remove too much sand from The End - Unrecognizable man with shovel near sand
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Remove too much sand from The End - Top View of Assorted-colored Row Boats



How do you fix too much sanding?

How to Fix an Over-Sanded Spot of Wood
  • Step 1: Lightly Shade the Over-Sanded Spot. In order eliminate the spot, you're going to need to sand the rest of the wood down to match that area, which means you need to be able to see when you've gotten the wood level. ...
  • Step 2: Sand the Wood Level. ...
  • Step 3: Erase Sanding Marks.


  • What is the proper sanding process for finishing a project?

    Sand completely at a low-grit (80) before moving to a higher grit (220) sandpaper. Sand your project up to 180-grit while disassembled, then sand to 220-grit after assembly. Use a power sander with lower grits, hand sand with the grain at higher grits.

    How do you fix sanding marks after staining?

    The only way to remove scratches from a unstained wood surface is to sand it again, this time moving in the direction of the grain. You can spot sand and stain the area again, if you blend the area surrounding the scratch together with the previously stained wood.

    How do I know if I sanded too much?

    If wood gets over-sanded in one spot, it starts to become uneven, with a distorted sort of appearance. This can happen to even the most experienced woodworker. Usually this starts simply by attempting to sand out a discoloration, defect, scratch or gouge.



    Watch this BEFORE top dressing with sand!




    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Cherry Jiang, Erik Mclean, Disha Sheta, thiago japyassu