[Pierre] recently bought his first car and decided to make his own RFID electric starter for it! An Arduino Nano controls two relays which in turn can turn the car on, start it, and turn it off.
RFID Module: Reads the UID from an RFID tag/card. If the UID matches the authorized UID, access is granted. Ensure the RFID tag/card UID matches the authorized UID in the code. Use the potentiometer ...
The use of Radio Frequency IDentification (RFID) technologies is growing. Many different applications are implemented in various sectors, and used for very different purposes. RFID enables wireless ...
This sketch enables writing user-defined text data to a passive RFID card using the MFRC522 RFID module and an Arduino-compatible microcontroller (e.g., ESP32-WROOM). Users can input up to 30 ...
[Jason] really wanted to build an RFID controlled garage door opener and decided to turn to Arduino to get the job done. For someone who’s never worked with an Arduino before, he really seemed to know ...
Abstract: Among the many potential applications of inexpensive radio frequency identification (RFID) technology are security, tracking assets, people monitoring, supply recognition, and access control ...
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