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Passive rfid transponders can be made with greater range than you have
experienced. For instance the Illinois Toll Roads have implemented what they call IPASS. This is a RFID that operates at highway distances and speeds. With IPASS you place the rfid in the center of your car/truck window and when you go through a toll plaza the reader induces an electrical current in the transponder. This current activates the coded transmitter which is read by the plaza receiving equipment. Each and every transponder that passes the reader is interrogated. The induction field is constant and activates the transponder as it is passed. There is another device called SPEED PASS that is used by Mobile Oil CO. The transponder is contained in a small plastic capsule shaped package. I took one apart and examined the contents. The transponder is contained inside a glass capsule and consists of a small (1/8") diameter coil that is connected to a small pc board with an IC and some other components. The entire thing is about 1/2" long. Range for this device is very short since it is associated with you credit card. I don't know how big an inductor is needed to provide enough power to transmit over the ranges you are looking at but some simple experimentation should answer this. Basically what the inductor is half of a transformer. The field generator is the other half. The power generated can be used to activate a transistor switch to provide power to the transmitter. For more information it would be best to do a google search on RFID and see what else is available. Good luck Dave Nagel fh03 wrote: David, can you please elaborate on how this can be done? And how it can be implemented so that the proper signal activates the unit. I'm sort of a newbie in this field and would appreciate it if you could explain how this can be done in greater detail. Thanks again. David G. Nagel Wrote: Use the passive receiver to power a transistor switch to activate the transmitter. You should be able to induce enough power in the unit to switch some kind of transistor switch connecting the battery to the second stage of the unit. You would have to be careful that only the proper signal activates the unit though. Dave WD9BDZ fh03 wrote: thanks for your input guys. I havent been able to come online due to power outages caused by hurricane wilma. anyway. the reed switch mentioned would work, but the distance is the issue. I currently have an rfid reader and passive tag, but they too work only within a few inches. What I need is for the device to be activated within 5 feet of the receiver and from my understanding a reed switch cant do that. I know electronic toll payment systems seem to conserve battery, and thats what i need. Bascially I want to have a battery in the unit, but I dont want the battery to be connected until we're in that range. The reason passive devices dont work is because even though the antenna can provide an induced current, without a battery the tag doesnt have enough power to be able to transmit over say a few inches, let alone five feet. So we need battery in the transmitter. The user only carries a transmitter, so it doenst know when it is within range. I have a microcontroller that will transmit an ID as soon as it is powered up, but I dont want it to be on at all times, and I dont want a switch. I'll look into the "Hall Effect" now and see what its about. Thanks again guys, keep it coming. |
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