SparkFun Electronics Commentsurn:uuid:214d0e4e-f1b1-d287-ce26-ac5b4c9f82492024-03-28T14:53:36-06:00SparkFun ElectronicsCustomer #155904 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #155904urn:uuid:95100160-3fef-476b-81cb-dab311b60a2c2016-07-19T09:57:24-06:00<p>Does anyone know if is it possible to print a logo or photo on these with Zebra printers ?</p>
Customer #534380 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #534380urn:uuid:7692e851-53bc-5f2f-5192-3d110a45f6692015-03-06T13:48:38-07:00<p>is it possible to change the id or to write info onto the card?</p>
Customer #519267 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #519267urn:uuid:2891bbf8-32e6-caa4-8960-99226cb5004b2014-02-10T13:42:17-07:00<p>these cards come with a number of predefined id?</p>
Customer #500261 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #500261urn:uuid:bde4da4b-3031-793e-173f-3e2b3b0790942014-02-03T11:00:52-07:00<p>Is it possible to cut off any portion of the card? or does the entire card have to remain intact for it to work?</p>
Purple People Eater on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Purple People Eaterurn:uuid:7dbd6cfe-8c79-ced3-dbf5-f79aeba634e12014-01-03T17:59:49-07:00<p>This works with all of the ID readers (ID 20, ID 12LA, etc)</p>
Purple People Eater on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Purple People Eaterurn:uuid:d605187c-f368-5fe8-4eef-a0f302f8fdd82014-01-03T17:58:47-07:00<p>No
Sorry :(<p>I recomend this:
https://www.sparkfun.com/products/11839</p></p>
LinuxArchitect on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)LinuxArchitecturn:uuid:7c5d457f-c9b4-fa10-026d-c877dc8383e92013-12-30T12:06:05-07:00<p>What are the various ways to add a logo and/or QR code to the cards?</p>
Customer #499154 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #499154urn:uuid:116bbed2-4588-9a66-f6f6-9c583e65747f2013-12-21T02:35:43-07:00<p>Will a 13.56 MHz reader read 125 kHz tags such as this? Specifically with <a href="https://www.sparkfun.com/products/10406" rel="nofollow">this</a> 13.56 sparkfun shield.</p>
Customer #486933 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #486933urn:uuid:eadf056f-fcfe-95f9-3aba-f03812c5d0842013-11-09T20:18:12-07:00<p>how about UHF RFID sensors and tags???</p>
pollard on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)pollardurn:uuid:3bc8a1a6-b238-c452-868a-2e81b191cf5b2013-08-21T07:18:31-06:00<p>.</p>
Customer #64935 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #64935urn:uuid:7e080f59-79bf-2f81-9108-a1352b9cb3242013-04-06T14:45:38-06:00<p>You can try <a href="http://www.rfidshop.com/" rel="nofollow">CoreRFID</a></p>
172pilot on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)172piloturn:uuid:7a852ebe-9d31-9b52-53a5-e02f5abb77472013-01-07T10:47:30-07:00<p>Anyone know where I can get some key-fob type tags? I've got an arduino based RFID garage door opener and I need some more tags.. I'm having a reliability issue with the brand I was using, so I was hoping to try something new???</p>
Thimplum on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Thimplumurn:uuid:504d6a93-af6a-37ea-b876-efd0d16ada912013-01-04T12:20:09-07:00<p>YUSSSSS! Thank you for getting the old unbranded tags back!</p>
Customer #381502 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #381502urn:uuid:3f902550-29e0-5a5e-ae05-4f92fa23cef12012-11-21T19:50:57-07:00<p>im new on rfid and i want to start some ID projects, i wanna know who is the way to write the tags? it is possible with the id 12/20 readers!?</p>
Customer #196882 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Customer #196882urn:uuid:efb6be4e-9c51-f156-e281-0c84a24b0ff42011-01-26T17:53:47-07:00<p>Is there gonna be a replacement for this type of tag?</p>
doobie on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)doobieurn:uuid:18642bc6-2cb8-f74a-7447-41ac7427a3fe2011-01-25T16:57:49-07:00<p>Dang, depreciated with no other tag? Any idea when you might have a replacement? I need a bunch and these guys are a lot cheaper than the capsule/buttons.</p>
lewandowski on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)lewandowskiurn:uuid:5e9d90ac-5104-5179-01ce-f36ca50bd2f82011-01-23T00:20:54-07:00<p><strong><a href="/users/51038" rel="nofollow">brrrrstickem</a>:</strong><blockquote>
<p>so that would be a 10 bit number<br>
No it's a 10 digit number.</p>
</blockquote></p>
lewandowski on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)lewandowskiurn:uuid:0fb1b11c-313c-4c84-ff35-a7034f808c1d2011-01-23T00:20:33-07:00<p>You're confusing yourself by calling the 32bit number a 10 byte number when it's actually a 10 digit number, not 10 byte. A 32bit number as stated by Applekid is from 0 - 4,295,967,295, which is the 10 DIGIT unique id.<br>
An example, an ID card can have a 10 digit id of 1004257542, which converted to 32bit, would be 111011110110111100000100000110 in binary.</p>
RobertC. on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)RobertC.urn:uuid:03cda1b2-6295-e406-4eeb-d3be30d0e0ea2010-11-19T11:11:55-07:00<p>We are waiting on a shipment. We do not have a good ETA at this point.</p>
Zurich on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Zurichurn:uuid:ff20dc36-bf45-2f10-2b4a-a44224e07cb62010-11-19T05:01:58-07:00<p>When will you be getting more of these tags?</p>
SomeGuy123 on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)SomeGuy123urn:uuid:98f1d0d8-257d-f223-f9fd-340cf5726c922010-11-06T19:04:45-06:00<p>You should put white products on black backgrounds.</p>
dsatterf on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)dsatterfurn:uuid:3ad4be6b-9224-4563-51f0-2c1c624a4b972010-10-01T16:47:14-06:00<p>Stelios: No, its not a 10-byte id because its not in a hex / encoded format.<br>
Example<br>
NUMBER: 1236542458<br>
HEX: 49B423FA<br>
ENCODED: 31323336353432343538<br>
brrrrstickem: No, a 10-bit number would be in the range from 0-1023.<br>
It is a 32-bit number. Its put in a numberical form because of easy of use: "1236542458" is easier to read/fit on a card than "01001001101101000010001111111010"</p>
JohnBoxall on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)JohnBoxallurn:uuid:9c36d0ca-467c-231d-fd8e-3417ec2527662010-08-18T03:23:48-06:00<p>Very easy to use with arduino - I have written a tutorial that may be of interest here: <a href="http://wp.me/pQmjR-JL" rel="nofollow">http://wp.me/pQmjR-JL</a></p>
brrrrstickem on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)brrrrstickemurn:uuid:8f0d6831-6f21-99f8-f9a2-e2a3fd2de3692010-08-05T07:02:02-06:00<p>s</p>
RobertC. on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)RobertC.urn:uuid:0679bd54-497c-20ab-8cff-a3886c328f9b2010-05-12T10:07:46-06:00<p>Yes. These are the exact tags we use in the video posted.</p>
Applekid on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Applekidurn:uuid:df4e34d9-a066-1635-59b1-17c04bc4d41b2010-05-04T14:10:41-06:00<p>A 32-bit number is ranged between 0 and 4294967295, inclusively. That 4 billion something number has 10 digits. Seems reasonable.</p>
fouchette on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)fouchetteurn:uuid:c8f3b5fc-5ef7-7a08-6688-807ad08f21bb2010-05-04T11:19:27-06:00<p>i should be receiving mine pretty soon.<br>
however, i do want some explanations regarding this 32bits VS 10bytes thing</p>
DHowett on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)DHowetturn:uuid:8b973e0b-2dc6-27fe-58c1-8ec1e3cd7de02010-01-17T03:20:28-07:00<p>I thought it was just a picture of a quarter, at first. I was quite confused.</p>
AKAQ on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)AKAQurn:uuid:ccbe5649-35a9-4625-7eb4-b99943b6dd702009-12-26T19:51:18-07:00<p>doese this tag work with 125KHz RFID reader ID-12??????</p>
Stelios on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Steliosurn:uuid:6cc5da3b-cae4-8cd1-4b52-339399cc41432009-10-12T04:07:29-06:00<p>I bought some of these cards ,and i see that they have a 10 byte unique id. But here it says that the have 32 bit ID. Can someone explain to me how can this happen?</p>
pcmofo on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)pcmofourn:uuid:2c9fc952-3c77-8c55-ae97-8e6e88b4eb6e2009-10-06T19:23:20-06:00<p>These work great with the ID-20 reader and give 8cm of reading range! Any key fob with the same spec's (lots on ebay) will read just the same.<br>
These are the thin cards, just like credit card thickness. Looks like you could print on them if you had a big fancy card printer. Reads fine even through a wallet.</p>
echovoice on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)echovoiceurn:uuid:9013adc5-c707-54b1-878e-9010ffc69c432009-08-04T19:56:03-06:00<p>did u guys use these to print on?</p>
lobstertail on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)lobstertailurn:uuid:2b7d6e6d-0642-05cf-1458-d8e79a98880f2009-07-26T10:09:13-06:00<p>Are there any key FOB versions of this that is compatible with the ID-20?</p>
Jcash on COM-08310 - RFID Tag (125kHz)Jcashurn:uuid:db608e4d-34aa-3625-e787-6e9e92d824fc2008-10-21T19:13:33-06:00<p>Decent cards. Works as advertised with ID-12 reader.</p>