[Pierre] recently bought his first car and decided to make his own RFID electric starter for it! An Arduino Nano controls two relays which in turn can turn the car on, start it, and turn it off.
An Arduino, a spent roll of toilet paper, magnet wire, and a few passive components are what’s needed to build this RFID spoofer. It’s quick, dirty, and best of all, simple. However, [SketchSk3tch’s] ...
Graph-Tech's RFID-Runner is capable of encoding and printing 10,000 RFID tags in under 12 minutes, reducing production times.
TC53 devices have been expanded to enable users to read UHF RFID tags at a range of about four feet. Technology company Zebra recently released its TC53e-RFID device, an enhanced version of its TC53 ...