There should be fundamental limitations, but not in a way you'd expect. The uncertainty principle is essentially a reflection of the non-commutativity of the two quantities $x$ and $p$.
According to the Copenhagen interpretation of QM, once you make an exact measurement of the position $x$ at time $t$ (the first measurement can, in itself, be made arbitrarily exact), the wave function collapses to a particular position state, which here would be a dirac delta at $x = x_0$ (say)
$$ |\Psi(t_+)\rangle = |x_0\rangle $$
Assuming we chose the $\Delta t$ to be arbitrarily small so that the state on which one makes the next observation (of $p$) is the same as the one $|\Psi(t_+)\rangle$. In the momentum eigen-basis, this wave function can be written as
\begin{align}
|\Psi\rangle &= |x_0\rangle,\\
&= \int dp ~|p\rangle \langle p| x_0\rangle, \\
&= \int dp ~|p\rangle e^{-ipx_0/\hbar}.
\end{align}
Since the number $e^{-ipx_0/\hbar}$ is a just a phase factor, the probability for the particle to be in any momentum state (or to possess any momentum value) is uniform over all $p$ values. One can as well say that momentum is not well defined right after measurement of position. I hope this answers your question.
If $\Delta t$ is non-zero yet small, uncertainty still shows up and can be seen through either evolving the state (Schrodinger picture) or the operators (Heisenberg picture). In the latter approach, we have a time dependent operator given as
$$ p(\Delta t) = e^{iH \Delta t/\hbar} p(0) e^{-iH \Delta t/\hbar} $$
For small $\Delta t$, $p(\Delta t)$ can be approximated through a truncated Hausdorff expansion. We can quantify the uncertainty through the commutator
\begin{align}
C &= [x(0),p(\Delta t)],\\
&= [x(0),e^{iH \Delta t/\hbar} p(0) e^{-iH \Delta t/\hbar}] ,
\end{align}
which can be evaluated approximately or accurately depending on the complexity of the Hamiltonian $H$.