Inconsistent braille output occurs when dot height, spacing, or alignment varies across a page or throughout a production run. This reduces readability and makes braille more difficult to interpret, particularly in longer documents.
In production environments, braille embossers and braille printers must produce uniform, repeatable output from the first page to the last. Any deviation introduces errors, slows reading, and reduces confidence in the material.
Inconsistency is typically caused by limitations in how embossers are designed, along with the use of materials that do not support quality braille. These issues are not isolated—they compound during continuous operation.
Consistent braille output is not optional. It defines whether braille can be read accurately and efficiently.
For a detailed explanation of what causes inconsistent braille output and how it is addressed, refer to Braillo’s full article: