Passive tags are the most cost-effective tags. Passive tags do not have their own power supply. They work with the power of RFID readers. These tags, which are the cheapest, are the most widely used tags. The vast majority of RFID systems are created with passive tags. It has a very wide range on a sectoral basis.
RFGate T70R6 UHF RFID Tag

- It is powered by the Monza R6 chip with RFGate's volume-oriented structure.
- It has reached the highest levels of read and write performance with the EPCglobal Class 1 Gen 2 (ISO 18000-6C) protocol.
- It operates in the range of 860-960 MHz.
- T70R6, which has EPC 96 bits; Unique TID 48 bits, memory, can be read from 13 metres with a suitable reader and antenna.
- It can be used on wood, plastic, glass and cardboard surfaces.
- Designed in 73 mm x 20 mm dimensions.
- It operates between -20°C and +80°C.
- It has a low power operating principle for both reading and coding.
- It has a special security feature for cloning and copying attempts.
Areas of Use
RFGate T70R6 UHF RFID Tag; It is a product produced for textile, fixture, archive, library and general use.
Blog Post
RFID Application in the Textile Industry
RFID helps accurately identify product types, sizes, and quantities in the textile and clothing industry. It is widely used by wholesalers, retailers, clothing service providers, and companies cleaning hospital or hotel linens. Brand manufacturers also use sewable RFID tags to authenticate original products.
Benefits of RFID in the Textile Industry
RFID increases competitiveness, prevents theft, enables custom presentation for customers, and allows close monitoring to solve issues and improve transportation efficiency. Active RFID systems boost productivity in merchandising. They track how long a product is examined and whether it is purchased. Returned products are easily detected. Product data like sales date and price can be stored on the label and accessed instantly.
RFID vs. Barcode
RFID readers can scan multiple tags simultaneously, unlike barcodes which require one-by-one reading. RFID tags offer much larger memory and dynamic data storage. Active RFID tags have ranges up to 100 meters; passive tags up to 1 meter. Barcodes need direct optical contact and shorter read distances. RFID tags are more durable and longer-lasting than barcodes.
Challenges of RFID in the Textile Industry
Implementing RFID takes time: supplying and positioning readers, tagging items, coding, and software integration. It also costs more than other systems. However, once the cost is managed, RFID offers reliable performance.
Labels: textile tracking, production tracking, rfid textile system