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An Arduino Nano controls two relays which in turn can turn the car on, start it, and turn it off. Instead of adding a button for “push to start” he opted for a 13.56MHz RFID module.
An Arduino, a spent roll of toilet paper, magnet wire, and a few passive components are what’s needed to build this RFID spoofer. It’s quick, dirty, and best of all, simple. However, [S… ...
You’ve heard of them, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID, pronounced arfid) tags, little transmitter chips that broadcast your identity to airline check-in stations as well as to anyone who ...
There is a latching mode, and a momentary mode. This unit can program 6x RFID cards in less than 30 seconds! Easily connect to to Arduino! Sample code available.This set is production ready!
Instructables user talk2bruce created the Arduino Internet Gizmo, a card reader that takes you to your favorite websites with a touch of an RFID tag.
A cool RFID music table has been created using Arduino, iPod, and RFID tags to make it easy to change albums by simply changing the RFID tag. Each RFID tag has an individual code number relating ...
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