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Subject: 
RE: wireless sensors, and battery life: time synch
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.robotics
Date: 
Sun, 12 Jun 2005 12:28:30 GMT
Original-From: 
Heady <ONEHEADY@AMERITECH.ihatespamNET>
Viewed: 
1138 times
  
The other thing to think about, are the toll tag systems like EZpass (which
I believe are also RFID).  These systems are probably higher power and allow
for greater distance between the device and the transmitter.  They are very
fast at reading the RFID.  For example, the Penn turnpike just installed a
lane where you drive 60mpg through these arches that read the tag (yes, you
don't slow down).

They also must have the ability of directionalizing (is that a word?) the
transmitting/receiving antenna so that they don't pick up the wrong car.

-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Baker [mailto:sjbaker1@airmail.net]
Sent: Saturday, June 11, 2005 11:20 PM
Cc: lego-robotics@crynwr.com
Subject: Re: wireless sensors, and battery life: time synch

pixel wrote:

rfid id cards are not powered and they are not in listen mode
in fact rfid cards are tataly dead when they have no signal from sender

i know the range of rfid is pretty short
but maybe just the idea can be used

RFID actually takes it's power by absorbing radio energy from the (fairly
high power) transmission that's sent to it.  This gives them *just* enough
power to transmit back their ID code at VERY low power - and nothing else.

That's why the range is so short.  The tag has to get close enough to the
transmitter to pick up enough power to run it - and the signal coming
back from the tag has to be really low-powered - so it has to be close
to the reciever for the signal to make it that far.

There is also the issue of when a shopping-cart load of RFID-tagged
goods pass through the checkout, all of the tags want to talk at once.

If you imagine a typical branch of WalMart, there could easily be 50
carts and therefore maybe 1000 or more RFID tags in the checkout area.
If the range was long enough, all of those tags would clutter up the
radio frequencies to an amazing degree.

Hence, the range is deliberately kept short to minimise the number
of tags that are trying to transmit at once.

---------------------------- Steve Baker -------------------------
HomeEmail: <sjbaker1@airmail.net>    WorkEmail: <sjbaker@link.com>
HomePage : http://www.sjbaker.org
Projects : http://plib.sf.net    http://tuxaqfh.sf.net
            http://tuxkart.sf.net http://prettypoly.sf.net
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