
HF and UHF RFID
Impinj Gen 2 (Monza)
Propeller
Impinj Paper Clip KSW Excalibur
KSW Templar Gen2 Omron Wave Philips I-Code
Philips I-Code ISO 15693 Rafsec 3000734 Rafsec 3000888
Rafsec Dogbone Rafsec Frog Rafsec Psychedelic
Rafsec Short Dipole
Rafsec Square
Dipole
RFIdentics Flexwing
RSI Jumping Jack Symbol Four T Symbol Trident
Symbol X1060 Symbol X2020 TI Gen 2 (Dallas)
TI Tag-it
TI Tag-it ISO
15693
What type of data will be encoded?
This is the EPC or DoD Encoding Type or the URI data. Each encoding type has its key benefits and
reasons for usage. Each requires specific information that you may or may not have on hand, for
example, a Company Prefix number, a Serial Number. Class 1 Gen 2 tags require a 96-bit EPC identifier;
64-bit encodings cannot be used.
HF and UHF RFID
Loftware supports HF and UHF encoding schemes. This utilizes block structures of HF and UHF tags,
which can vary, not only from one frequency to another, but many times from one tag type to another.
We encourage you to refer to external sources for more information on the different RFID tag types.
Loftware usage depends on the types of labels you wish to encode.
Most RFID systems in the Ultra High Frequency (UHF) band operate between 868 and 930 MHz.
Loftware supports tags that comply with EPCglobal and DOD coding standards for UHF. They include
UHF 64-bit Class 1, UHF 96-bit Class 1, UHF 96-bit Class 0+, UHF UCODE EPC 1.19, or UHF ISO 18000-
6B.Loftware also supports UHF Class 1 Generation 2 tags. Tag types differ in the block layout as shown
in the table below.
UHF Tag Type Loftware Configurable Blocks
UHF 64-bit Class 1
2 blocks:
PC- (Pass Code) - block size = 1 byte
(Refer to Block Configuration for more information on the PC block.)
EPC - block size = 8 bytes
Loftware LabelManager Version 10.1.1 User's Guide
155
Comentários a estes Manuais