Difference between revisions of "125 KHz"
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Latest revision as of 16:51, 11 September 2015
Contents
Cornell project: Proximity Security System
- Discrete components 125 KHz RFID reader
- ATmega32
- C source code
- Project: HERE
- Microchip microID 125 kHz RFID System Design Guide
EMARIN
- TODO: review all Elektor projects with EMARIN 125KHz RFID
- Using:
- Long-Range-Reader Project without EM4095
- Elektor-Style ATtiny transponders
No EMARIN devices to buy :)
Elektor July-August 2008 RFID Door Opener
- RFID Door Opener Published in issue 379, July/August 2008
- SFChip: SF6107
- 125 KHz
- EM MICROELECTRONIC EM4102 Compatible
Elektor June 2009 ATM18 RFID Savvy EM4095, ATmega and Bascom
- RFID appears to be well on its way to becoming a technology of the future. Many people mistrust this technology, while some see it as the answer to every problem. One thing is certain: these tiny devices will be everywhere around us in the future, whether or not we notice them. Our ATM18 board provides the ideal basis for experimenting with RFID devices and implementing your own ideas.
- EM4095 Reader
- Compatible with RFID tags EM4102 and EM4200
Elektor June 2010 Wireless Electricity meets RFID
In this article we describe a do-it-yourself RFID reader- as well as a way of making your own RFID tags" What's more, we show how to make RFID tags that include a transducer, opening up the possibility of making RFID sensors. The tiny sensor module operates without an internal power source and delivers its readings to the RFID reader for further processing.
- Reader: ATtiny2313, replacing EM4095
- Tranponder: ATtiny13, replacing EM4102
- Software was written for the reader in C (WinAVR/GCC, Only Source, No Project-file).
- In Assembly for Transponder
AustriaMicrosytems
- AS3933 Programmable 3D Low Power LF Wakeup Receiver (15 - 150 kHz)
- For Active RFID tags
- AS3990/91/92 for UHF
- AS3910 for HF ISO14443 A/B ISO15693(35cm without booster)