Braille quality is defined by measurable standards, including dot height, alignment, and consistency across every page. In production environments, maintaining these elements at high operating speeds is essential to ensuring readability and compliance. This section explores how embossers, materials, and real-world conditions impact braille quality over time.
Engineering Braille Quality: Shape, Height, and Alignment
Since introducing the world’s first interpoint production braille embosser in 1980, Braillo has focused on engineering embossers capable of producing high-quality braille—consistently, reliably, and over extended production cycles. Production braille embossing requires a level of precision and durability that goes beyond...
