First off i'd like to say, when i posted my photos it was because i have, like all of you had LOTS of failures and i'm the sort of person who likes everyone to succeed, i would get no pleasure in posting my efforts if i was just saying look at what i can do (that's not me) i was trying to say thank you to those who have helped me to achieve some of my goals.
I also struggle to recommend any particular method that costs money as i would hate it if you blamed me for it not working for you.
The breadmaker is the second one that i have owned, the first one was when they became popular a few years ago and i have to say it was an unmitigated disaster. The new one i bought with naan and pizza dough in mind, has a larger 2lb capacity which when i double up on the recipe fills just over a third of the bread pan, when proving it will push up into the lid of the machine and has to be monitored to stop it going over the top.
When the naan dough has finished it looks very aerated, sticky, slightly wet and pliable, i don't push my hands in to remove the dough or knock it back as in traditional bread making, i just turn it out and give it a light dusting of flour and allow it to rest for 10/15 mins while the pizza maker warms up.
I will when i have a bit more time post pictures of the process.
Axe, you asked me to be critical, wow that's so hard as my curry quest started in the mid 80's and i have eaten a lot of bought BIR/TA's in that time, my two local restaurants take different approaches, one is expensive and serves top notch gas tandoor oven baked naans and the other is cheap and serves the biggest naans i've ever seen (they are like a table cloth) they are cooked similar to how Dipuraja's does them in a large oven but are not blistered and scorched, both taste good.
Now mine taste and have the texture of the first BIR that i described and if you eat them in the restaurant they are blistered, crisp and light and not hard but if you have them TA from the same place then the moisture in the silver lined naan bread bag makes them soggy and more chewy, if i bring home a naan from the cheap and cheerful place their naan goes hard if you leave it to go cold.
I haven't tried keema naan yet but i have tried peshwari which worked out well to make, unfortunately the filling wasn't quite right, a work in progress

Sorry for the ramble i find explaining so hard, Rob.