
Supported Printers and Drivers
HF Tag Type Configurable Data Blocks
TI HF Tag-it
User data is contained in blocks 0-7. Each block consists of 4 bytes.
Supports Lock Tag after Writing and Overflow features.
TI HF Tag-it ISO
15693
User data is organized into 64 blocks (0 to 63). Each block consists of 4 bytes. RF interface is
defined by the ISO 15693 standard.
Supports Lock Tag After Writing, Overflow, AFI, and DSFID features.
The following UHF tag types are supported by Loftware.See also the next section on RFID Devices and
Tag Types.
UHF Tag Type User-accessible Data Blocks
UHF 64-bit Class 1
PC block = 1 byte - used to lock the tag
EPC block = 8 bytes - used for EPC / DOD / URI
UHF 96-bit Class 1
PC block = 1 byte - used to lock the tag
EPC block = 12 bytes used for EPC / DOD / URI
UHF 96-bit Class 0+
KC block = 3 bytes - used to lock the tag
EPC block = 12 bytes used for EPC / DOD / URI
USR block = 13 bytes - used for user specific
data
UHF UCODE EPC
1.19
Block #0 = 12 bytes
UHF ISO 18000-6B Block #0 = 200 bytes
UHF Class 1 Gen 2
32-bit Access Password
32-bit Kill Password
96-bit EPC
32-byte USR block
RFID Devices and Tag Types
In order to encode data on RFID labels and tags, an RFID device must support specific RFID
commands.Some RFID printers exclusively support encoding to UHF tag types.Others will write only to
HF tags.A few printers support both UHF and HF tags.
The tables below list current Loftware RFID printers and the tag types each supports.
RFID UHF Printers
This table shows Loftware RFID Gen 1 and Gen 2 UHF printers for smart labels and the UHF tag types
each supports.
Loftware Label Manager Version 10.1.1 User's Guide
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