Skip to main content

New system from Rinas points way to continuous RFID ticket encoding

Magnetic stripe encoding and verification specialist Rinas has developed a continuous ticket personalisation system for RFID ticketing. The system accepts continuous pre- printed tickets either in fan-folded form or in batch rolls containing anything up to 3,000 individual tickets.
October 28, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Magnetic stripe encoding and verification specialist Rinas has developed a continuous ticket personalisation system for RFID ticketing.

The system accepts continuous pre- printed tickets either in fan-folded form or in batch rolls containing anything up to 3,000 individual tickets. The length of each ticket is entered as a software parameter while the width is mechanically adjusted and then entered as a parameter in the software.

The number of RFID transponders that can be installed using the system is limited purely by mechanical restraints but is  currently limited to six for parallel ticket processing. Up to eight (four on each side) ‘ruggedised’ print units, each fitted with a dedicated print cartridge with an integrated print head, can be cascaded for print height variation at a 12.7mm pitch. The technology in use is based on trusted HP print technology and uses the same inkjet expertise in daily use by millions of office printers. The system also enables scanner units to be integrated for OCR tasks, barcode or 2D code recognition, database retrieval of personalisation information and quality inspection tasks after printing.

It is also capable of marking and logging tickets with defective transponders. Once personalised, the new drum or container of fan-folded individually personalised tickets can be lifted off the unit ready to be installed into a ticket vending machine. Rinas says that, with minimal intervention, the machine is capable of conversion for more ambitious tasks involving the encoding of both RFID and MagStripe continuous tickets. The MagStripe option has more variables, however, so this would require a more detailed customer specification. %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal <span class="mouselink">www.rinas.com</span> Visit www.rinas.com Website false http://www.rinas.com/ false false%>

Related Content

  • Satellic launches Tolling as a Service system at ITS World Congress
    October 24, 2012
    Satellic is using the World Congress to launch ‘Tolling as a Service’. Satellic, a brand of T-Systems, designed and implemented major parts of the German HGV tolling system on the country’s motorway network some years ago and is now introducing a second-generation version of the system. The pioneering system uses satellites and GPS connected to in-vehicle devices to measure the distance travelled by trucks on toll roads. Now, however, Tolling as a Service gives toll operators the option of not having to dea
  • Pole mounted safety solution minimises vehicle damage, injuries
    February 26, 2014
    The product consists of a metal box installed under urban equipment, such as streetlamps, pillars, and signposts. In the event of an impact from a vehicle, the equipment will release very easily so damage to the bodywork will be minimised, as will injuries and human losses.
  • JUSP launches all-in-one Chip & Pin mPOS solution
    October 31, 2013
    JUSP has launched an all-in-one chip-and-pin mPOS solution for smartphones and tablets, which the manufacturer says has a lower price (¤39 per unit) and smaller transaction fee (2.5%) than other such products. It is also the only one of its kind that connects directly into a smartphone or tablet audio jack using its proprietary, patent pending technology, JUSP says, and works with the highly secure credit and debit cards in all countries outside the US. It means merchants can make payment transactio
  • Call for contributions for ITS Europe
    November 21, 2016
    Ertico-ITS Europe has issued a call for contributions for the 12th ITS European Congress, which takes place in Strasbourg, 19-22 June 2017. The main theme of the congress is ‘ITS beyond borders’ and contributions should address the seven main topics, including mobility services, next generation goods delivery, transport networks evaluation, connected and automated transport, satellite technology applied to mobility, ITS and the environment, or the author’s own ideas. More information on the topics is