RFID systems can be used in a wide range of application since it provides an efficient and reliable means for identification. A typical RFID system consists of RFID tags or transponders which are used for storing and retrieving data via an RFID reader, and an antenna depending on the application.
Do you find it hard to manage your production process? Do you need to use great effort to keep track of your metal things? RFID technology, which is capable of tracking a part from manufacture to installation and beyond, may help to figure out the above problems.
An RFID “tag,” or computer chip and tiny antenna, can provide a complete history of the tracking part. The information can be added to or deleted as the part proceeds through a supply chain. And the information on that tag can be read anywhere along the way by a stationary RFID reader or an RFID reader-enabled mobile computer without the line of sight required by barcodes and from as far away as several feet.
RFID use is developing more rapidly than ever before with new use-cases coming of age in months rather than years. Generally, end-users employ metal mount RFID tags to track a large variety of items such as data center assets, work in process components, tools and pipes. Nowadays, many companies are adopting RFID and trying to tag challenging items such as blade servers, laptops, critical spare parts and tools for manufacturing.
Commonly, RFID metal tag of DAILY RFID(company name) has an impressive read range of up to 3 meters to 8 meters on metal and can easily be affixed to any metal surface either mechanically or by using industrial adhesives. Some small, fully encapsulated tags of the family have been successfully used in asset tracking applications such as railway and warehousing solutions.
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