Hi you're right that sometimes it seems far too temperamental for small
kids, but it can all be dealt with and the kids get a sense of being
vigilant about their work, and caring for their technology.
Lines blurring together happens when the right margin paper head isn't in
place.  It's easy to overlook, but is set once the paper has been loaded -
I've created the blurred line page you describe many times, until my student
pointed my errors out to me.
Wasn't it Confucious (spelling help please) who said, "the teacher opens the
door, the student passes through"?
Best of luck in work to all, no matter the device used,
kat

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Terri
Pannett
Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 4:39 AM
To: Braillenote List
Subject: Re: [Braillenote] The Mountbatton:


The Mountbatten I tried didn't work as well as the Perkins.  The paper
didn't want to go in right and the lines would often run into one another.
The unit I tried could have been broken, but if the brailler normally works
like the one I saw, then I certainly wouldn't recommend it to a beginner.

Terri Pannett, Amateur Radio call sign KF6CA.  Army MARS call sign AAT9PX,
California
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