Skip to main content

Nedap launches long range RFID solution for vehicle identification

Automatic vehicle identification and parking detection technology specialist Nedap has launched the uPASS Target, a high-end RFID reader designed or long-range identification using the Rain RFID (UHF EPC Gen II) Standard. According to Nedap, uPASS Target is suitable for applications where vehicles and other moving objects must be identified automatically using passive RFID tags. The new reader offers a read range of up to 10m (33 ft.) which enables it to provide long-range identification of vehicles, peo
April 19, 2016 Read time: 1 min
Automatic vehicle identification and parking detection technology specialist 3838 Nedap has launched the uPASS Target, a high-end RFID reader designed or long-range identification using the Rain RFID (UHF EPC Gen II) Standard.

According to Nedap, uPASS Target is suitable for applications where vehicles and other moving objects must be identified automatically using passive RFID tags. The new reader offers a read range of up to 10m (33 ft.) which enables it to provide long-range identification of vehicles, people and rolling stock at industrial sites and logistic depots.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Star Systems International flies high with Falcon
    May 6, 2025
    Dual-frequency transponder has UHF and NFC capabilities
  • Call for RFID tags on European trains
    September 9, 2015
    According to Juliette van Driel of Dutch government organisation ProRail, who is to speak on the subject at the Rail Technology Conference in Paris in November, there is a requirement for identification tags on European trains. Radio frequency identification (RFID) tags enable the monitoring and tracking of the separate components of a wagon, such as axles and wheels, over time. This enables the early identification of locomotive, carriage and wagon defects and the prevention of derailments. “It’s imp
  • DKT beats the blues
    March 31, 2022
    In The Blues Brothers, Jake and Elwood Blues famously stole a police car as they attempted to raise the necessary money to keep open the orphanage in which they had been raised.
  • Electric park brake technology gaining momentum in North America
    April 19, 2012
    TRW, a specialist in active and passive safety, says it has been awarded new business for its next-generation electric park brake (EPB) technology with two major North American based vehicle manufacturers. The system functions as a conventional hydraulic brake for standard service brake applications, and as an electric brake for parking and emergency braking. TRW launched the first integrated caliper EPB system in 2001 and is bringing the wide range of functional and ancillary benefits of EPB to the North A