Skip to main content

Confidex awarded OCS certification for 6C RFID tag

Confidex, Finland-based supplier of specialty RFID tags, has been awarded OCS certification for its 6C RFID windshield tag by OmniAir Certification Services (OCS), the test-affiliate of OmniAir Consortium, a technology-focused member association created to enable the deployment of interoperable advanced transportation technologies and applications. OCS certification positions Confidex as a certified, high-quality, high-volume RFID tag provider for the North American electronic toll collection market. The Co
February 11, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
946 Confidex, Finland-based supplier of specialty RFID tags, has been awarded OCS certification for its 6C RFID windshield tag by 808 OmniAir Certification Services (OCS), the test-affiliate of OmniAir Consortium, a technology-focused member association created to enable the deployment of interoperable advanced transportation technologies and applications. OCS certification positions Confidex as a certified, high-quality, high-volume RFID tag provider for the North American electronic toll collection market.
 
The Confidex windshield tag is specially designed for fast and reliable automatic vehicle identification applications such as electronic toll collection. The tag is based on passive UHF RFID 6C technology, the leading technology for providing interoperability (IOP) across North America for toll collection applications. The Confidex windshield tag is attached inside the vehicle windscreen and can be read automatically from several meters away, even at high speeds. It is easily and extensively customised with surface printing, security markings or special programming. The product has received the electronic toll collection compliance certification from OmniAir Certification Services.

“I am delighted that the Confidex 6C RFID windshield tag has achieved the stringent OCS certification. This is a major milestone in our continuing drive to support the North American electronic toll collection market,” says Alexander Dannias, general manager of Confidex Americas. “OCS certification demonstrates that our windshield tag meets the demanding requirements of the Omniair Consortium for safe and secure operation in a variety of automatic vehicle identification applications, such as toll collection, with the highest interoperability. This certification can also be used in other countries as a standard reference for the minimum quality and functionality requirements needed for this product.”

Confidex partnered with RFID IC and reader provider Impinj and incorporated the Impinj Monza 4E chip into the windshield tag. “Confidex was one of the very first RFID tag suppliers to take advantage of the high performance of Monza chips to cover all approved UHF global frequency ranges for their hard tags,” says Nikhil Deulkar, senior product line manager at Impinj. “The 6C RFID windshield tag is another milestone in our long history of technological and business collaboration.”

The OCS certification program ensures tolling tag and reader interoperability across equipment vendors and toll facilities. The test program includes testing for baseline and applied interoperability.

Comments Tim McGuckin, executive director of OmniAir Consortium, “The Board of OmniAir Certification Services put in a great amount of time and effort working with the user community, the 6C Toll Operators Committee, to develop the 6C-for-Tolling Certification Program.  To see it put into action, where we have Confidex as another officially certified 6C supplier offering products for real-world toll deployments, is an exciting testament to the hard work of the OCS, Confidex, and the commitment of toll operators to procure certified products. Together, this advances the mission of OmniAir – interoperability through certification.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Star Systems mobile transponder reader
    November 16, 2020
    With the ubiquitous use of transponders for ETC globally, many operators are using hand-held terminals with apps that can verify vehicle identity and collect tolls to reduce queue times and traffic jams at multi-mode toll plazas.
  • Ouster’s Blue City passes Nema TS2 certification
    September 10, 2024
    Traffic control solution uses Buy America(n) certified Lidar
  • Priority for safety and interoperability, need for DSRC
    July 18, 2012
    Justin McNew, Chief Technology Officer, Kapsch TrafficCom Inc., USA offers his opinion of where 5.9GHz DSRC technology will head in the coming years. The debate ranges back and forth over the most suitable technological solution for future tolling and charging in the US. However, the coming trend is common cooperative infrastructure: instrumented roads and vehicles with the capacity to communicate with each other over all manner of safety, mobility and traveller applications, many of which will involve fina
  • Kapsch wins 10-year E-ZPass contract
    January 27, 2012
    Kapsch TrafficCom IVHS has been selected by the E-ZPass Group, a coalition of 24 toll agencies in 14 US states, as vendor for a new 10-year technology and services contracts, subject to individual agency approval processes.