Title: RFID technology and Case Studies
1RFID technology and Case Studies
- John Nagelmakers
- TORWUG June 21st, 2007
2RFID Projects Start with Services
3Portals
- Move by Item or Carton
- In-Store
- Floor Loading
- Tool Cages
- Data Volume
- Smart Readers
- Reader Consolidation
4Vehicle Mount
- Forklift
- Fewer forklifts than dock doors
- Additional applications
- Curbside Collection Trucks
- Delivery and Service Vans
5Portable
- Validation
- Cost Effective
- Seek and Find
6Reusable Tags
- Lower Cost Per Use
- Totes, Pallets, Trays
7Current Applications
- Curbside Recycle Collection
- Asset Tracking
- Reusable Container Tracking
- Supply Chain
- WIP
8Whats in an RFID solution
- Labels/Tags
- Printers
- Fixed Readers
- Portable Readers
- Software Application
- Integration
- Case Studies - ROI
9Labels
10AD-220
- Plug Play OEM compatible with similarly sized
Gen 2 Inlay - EPC Class1 Gen2
- 915MHz
- Targeted Regions Americas, APAC
- Chip manufacturer / IC Impinj Monza
- High performance in high volume corrugated box
labeling applications - Standard S-490 adhesive for wet inlays
- Delivered in Roll Form, Individual Inlay Format
- Antenna dimension 3.76 x .315 inch
- Substrate material PET
- Dry and PS Inlays
Sound Bite Extremely high yield, Application
OEM compatible Economy Tag
11AD-222
- Backwards compatible Plug Play OEM
application Drop-In compatible with similarly
sized Gen 2 Inlay - EPC Class1 Gen2
- 915MHz - 866MHz
- Targeted Regions Global
- Chip manufacturer / IC Impinj Monza 2
- Increased Read Rate in the application. Improved
performance over the AD-220 and other 4 x .5
dipoles. Improved noise immunity. - Aluminum Antenna environmentally friendly.
Standard S-490 adhesive for wet inlays - Delivered in Roll Form, Individual Inlay Format
- Antenna dimension 3.74 x .310 inch
- Substrate material PET
- Dry and PS Inlays
Sound Bite Extremely high yield, Drop-in
compatible, Global Tag
12AD-420/421
- Improved Performance, Special Purpose tag for
broad SKU usage on corrugated cases and trays. - EPC Class 1 Gen2.
- 915MHz and 866MHz versions
- Targeted Regions Global (Except Japan)
- Chip manufacturer / I.C. Name Impinj Monza
- Read Characteristics Exhibits position
insensitively. Improved performance across wide
range of SKUs especially liquids and metals
contents. - Environmental Standard S-490 adhesive for wet
inlays - Delivered in Roll Form, Individual Inlay Format
- Antenna dimension 3.70 x 1.26in
- Substrate material PET
- Dry and PS Inlays
AD-421 (EMEA) / AD-420 (US)
Sound Bite High Performer on many difficult SKUs
(Content Insensitive), The All Purpose Tag
13AD-622
- Improved Performance 3D (orientation
insensitive). Exhibits good metal performance. - EPC Class1 Gen2
- 915MHz (UHF)
- Targeted Regions North America / APAC
- Chip manufacturer / IC Impinj Monza
- 3D, wide read angle.
- Standard S-490 adhesive for wet inlays
- Delivered in Roll Form, Individual Inlay Format
- Antenna dimension 3.75 x 3.35 inches
- Substrate material PET
- Dry and PS inlays
Sound Bite Improved Performance 3D Pallet tag
14Position Sensitivity
Results on trays of cans (red is good)
15Reusable Tags
- Small Rigid Tag - Intermecs Small Rigid Tag
(SRT) is a truly passive UHF RFID tag designed
for superior performance on a variety of
surfaces. The tag available in both EPC Global
Class 1, Generation 2 (Gen 2) and ISO
18000-6B.protocols. -
- Large Rigid Tag - Intermec's Large Rigid tag is a
truly passive UHF radio frequency identification
(RFID) transponder that delivers superior
performance on a variety of surfaces and is
available in both Gen 2 and ISO 18000-6B
versions. -
- IT32A Gen 2 ID Card - The IT32A offers not only
EPC Gen 2 / ISO 18000-6C air interface protocol,
and both FCC (915 MHz) and ETSI (865 MHz)
configurations, but also a longer read range than
most RFID card form factors. Its longer read
range and durable packaging make it the ideal
RFID tag for a variety of applications. -
- 915 MHz Container Tag - The Container Tag is a
high-performance durable product originally
designed for use with plastic pallets, but which
has a proven track record in a variety of
applications. This tag is one of the most
versatile designs in the portfolio due to its
consistent performance with a wide range of
materials. -
- 915 MHz ID Tag - The 915 MHz ID Card from
Intermec is the first credit card format
intelligent identification card on the market
that provides both long-range identification and
read/write capability for a wide range of
applications from Homeland, corporate and
personal security to luggage tags and customer
loyalty programs. -
- 915 MHz RPC Tag - Intermec's 915 MHz reusable
plastic container (RPCs) tag is specifically
designed for tracking RPC's throughout their
service lives. Compact, inconspicuous, and
completely encapsulated in a protective thermal
plastic alloy, Intermec RPC tags can withstand
shipping, washing, and heavy-duty wear. -
- 915 MHz Windshield Tag - The Windshield Tag is
optimized for attachment to vehicle windshields
and is primarily used for access control in
parking areas or secured campus environments.
The tag is produced on a flexible substrate and
includes an adhesive release liner for ease of
installation.
16Whats in an RFID solution
- Labels/Tags
- Printers
- Fixed Readers
- Portable Readers
- Software Application
- Integration
- Case Studies - ROI
17RFID Printers
- PM4i High use (i.e. Warehouse class)
- PM2i Medium use (i.e Airport luggage tags)
18Whats in an RFID solution
- Labels/Tags
- Printers
- Fixed Readers
- Portable Readers
- Software Application
- Integration
19Intermec Fixed RFID Readers
Entry-level / General Purpose
Rugged / Industrial
High Performance
Mid Performance
Basic Performance
20Portals Fixed readers in a chassis
21Whats in an RFID solution
- Labels/Tags
- Printers
- Fixed Readers
- Portable Readers
- Software Application
- Integration
- Case Studies - ROI
22Intermec Portable RFID Readers
Entry-level / General Purpose
Rugged / Industrial
High Performance
Mid Performance
Used in fork lift systems
Basic Performance
23Portable Readers Fork lift systems
Vehicle Mount Terminal
Antennas
Reader
24Whats in an RFID solution
- Labels/Tags
- Printers
- Fixed Readers
- Portable Readers
- Software Applications
- Integration
- Case Studies - ROI
25Software application
- What is your essential application
- Asset Management
- Inventory Management
- Resource Management
- Geo spatial data
- Does this application revision support adding
RFID Tag serialization to the data? - Is an upgrade necessary?
- Is software configuration necessary?
- Is software/database development required?
26Whats in an RFID solution
- Labels/Tags
- Printers
- Fixed Readers
- Portable Readers
- Software Applications
- Integration
- Case Studies - ROI
27Integration
- Do you have an competent IT department to perform
the integration? - Do you leverage a Systems Integrator to mitigate
the risk of integration? - IBM
- HP
- EDS
- Tier II SI
- Software system vendor i.e SAP, Siebel, Oracle,
etc. - Point solution software vendor
- Platform based software vendor
28EPC/RFID Solutions Strategy Strategy through
Implementation of the End-to-End solution
SI Solution Integration
- Business Case and Deployment Strategy
- Process Design and Integration
- Project Management Proof of Capability,
Trading Partner Pilots, Rollout - Solution architecture design
- Software installation and development
- Application Integration (WMS, ERP,etc)
- Network and data storage
- Infrastructure
Software Applications
Readers / Infrastructure
Chips / Tags
- -WMS
- ERP
- APS
- Transportation Planning
- Data Warehousing
Business Partners
29RFID Integrated - will deliver value in the
context of mission critical business processes
30SIs will provide a vision and business framework
that will help customers leverage RFID across the
enterprise
TBD
31Whats in an RFID solution
- Labels/Tags
- Printers
- Fixed Readers
- Portable Readers
- Software Applications
- Integration
- Case Studies - ROI
32Case Studies - ROI
33JR Freight
34JR Freight - Business Problem
- Railway transportation in Japan is regaining its
value in part because it operates so much more
cleanly than a fleet of trucks, which has problem
of exhaust and nitrogen oxide. To meet the
growing transport needs of Japans businesses, JR
Freight maintains more than 120 terminals in
Japan, managing 8,000 rail wagons and 100,000
railway containers. - Cargo moves from stop to stop in a freight line
running north and south on Japans four main
islands. At each stop, steel containers ranging
in size from 12-feet rail containers to 30-feet
freight containers are off-loaded from the
railcars and stacked in rows 30 to 40 deep and
one or two high. Keeping track of hundreds even
thousands of containers has involved tedious,
time-consuming manual labor. - Six Japan Passenger Railway companies own the
railroad and have priority in operating schedule
over JR Freight. Freight can move only during
off-peak commuter hours, mostly during the night.
Deliveries must be completed before morning
passenger trains take over the tracks. - The time constraints simply dont allow for
inefficient practices. Under the former manual
tracking system, JR Freight operators walked
around extensive terminals and recorded
containers loading arrangement on rail wagons
via a handy terminal. This was a big burden for
the operators.
35JR Freight - Solution
- Now a complete RFID system including a wireless
backbone, fixed readers, handheld terminals, RFID
technology and global-positioning equipment
tracks each container in JR Freights inventory. - Implementing the new system was a joint effort
among JR Freight, Japan RF Solutions (JRFS),
Sharp and the system integrator (NEC group).
Container identification information is scanned
from readers manufactured by Sharp based on
Intermec Intellitag RFID technology, which tied
the front-end system into the backbone and is one
of the key technologies supporting the JR Freight
project - The metal-mounted and molded tags a Sharp
product featuring the Intellitagchip are
half-cylinder shaped and about 2 inches long by
half inch wide. The flat back mounts flush to
each side of a container. Seven tags mount to
each side of a rail wagon. - A JR Freight forklift is outfitted with a fixed
RFID reader and four antennas for automatic
identification of container number, rail wagon
and truck number without any manual operation.
Two of four antennas are used to read container
tags, the other two antennas for railcar and
truck tags. When the forklifts load containers,
the fixed reader transmits a radio signal to a
containers tag and a rail wagons tag separately
through four antennas. The tag transmits its
information to its designated antennas, which
relays the data back to the reader and on to the
main server through a wireless network
36JR Freight - Benefits
- Now the server knows the identity of the
container number, which is programmed into the
readable and writeable tag. The fixed reader
tells the main server not only on which railcar
to load the container but also where in the car
to place it. - Workers in the JR Freight maintenance office can
also use Sharps Handy Terminal to program tag
numbers into each tag. Once the container is
loaded, the system reads the tag on the railcar.
This updates the server, tying the container to
an exact location and informing the worker
immediately how the containers are arranged in a
particular freight train. - Tracking offloaded containers works much the same
way. At each stop on the rail line, forklift
drivers lift containers from the railcar and
stack them in a yard. As each container is
placed, a global positioning system in the
forklift records the exact coordinates of the
containers location. A quick read of the tag
reports the data to the server. - Now, with its sleek new tracking system, JR
Freight is pushing its communications and
container movement to the highest possible
speeds. With Japan RF Solutions and Sharp
products (based on Intermecs Intellitag
technology), JR Freight is on the fast track to
success.
37US Navy
38US Navy Business Problem
- While the planes and their pilots may be the
stars of the show, deploying a Naval aviation
squadron usually requires a skilled crew and a
pack-up kit, or PUK, containing hundreds of
replacement parts worth 10 million or more. - The U.S. Navy Regional Supply Office in Norfolk,
Va. Provides logistical support for the aircraft
squadrons stationed at Naval Air Station Norfolk.
Aircraft types based at NAS Norfolk include E-2C,
C-2, MH-53, H-46, SH-3 and MH-60. When a squadron
is deployed, a PUK of several pallets and
five-by-five-by-five foot cartons of supplies,
known as tri-walls, are sent along with it,
traveling from the regional supply office command
to the supply command assigned to the squadron. A
typical E2C PUK contains 500-600 parts. - Before the PUK leaves Norfolk, both commands must
agree upon the contents. In the past, one person
called out part numbers from a printed list while
two others each representing a command
checked off the items on their own inventory
lists. Any discrepancies were noted and manually
entered into the system after the inventory was
complete. This process usually took three people
a total of 24 man-hours. At an average burdened
wage of 28.83 per hour, the labor cost for
performing one PUK inventory was in excess of
690. Multiply that by the 64 PUKs inventoried at
least four times a year at Norfolk alone, and the
Navy had a very costly logistical nightmare. In
addition, once the PUK was in the field, simply
locating one part out of the 500 in the kit could
take hours. And there was little visibility into
the replenishment supply chain, sometimes
resulting in multiple orders of the same part.
39US Navy - Solution
- Utilizing technology of Mobile Computers and
RFID Printers. - To improve inventory management, the supply
officers at NAS Norfolk looked to radio frequency
identification (RFID) technology and the
expertise of a team of logistics and RFID
specialists, including Intermec Technologies,
Serco, Phase IV Engineering, Boh Environmental
and PSC Technology. - RFID technology allows users to automatically
track inventory throughout an entire supply
chain. RFID data collection systems typically do
not require line of sight or manual scanning as
do most bar code-based systems, and offer
significant improvement over the labor and
logistical challenges of manual systems. The
technology was a natural fit for the Navys
Automatic Identification Technology (AIT)
initiative, and so the Navy ordered a pilot
technological overhaul of the PUK inventory
process.
40US Navy - Benefits
- 98 percent reduction in inventory time
- NAS Norfolks first evaluation of RFID integrated
the technology into the E- 2C PUKs assigned to a
detachment at NAS Fallon, Nev. The evaluation
yielded dramatic results. Each time we sent a
PUK out on detachment, wed have to do a turnover
inventory from my command to the supply personnel
attached to the squadron, said Lt. John Wait,
assistant supply officer at NAS Norfolk. Both
commands must count the same things together and
agree on the contents. Its extremely cumbersome.
Wed each have a paper copy of the inventory and
someone would call off each nine-digit number and
we all check it off the list. With the manual
system, it took about 24 man-hours to do one E2
PUK. With RFID, we now inventory that same PUK in
less than 30 minutes. - Under the old system, when a maintenance tech
set out to find a part there was no telling its
location down to which tri-wall the part was in
or even which pallet, Wait said. It was kind of
like finding a needle in a haystack. Imagine
500-600 parts in a warehouse on 12 or 15 pallets,
or the parts are stored in tri-walls with
approximately 50 parts in each, some the size of
a carton of cigarettes, said Chet Zeller,
project manager for Serco, systems integrator for
the project. When a mechanic needs a specific
bleed air valve, it may take several hours just
to find that one part. With RFID, the mechanic
enters the item he needs, scans with the reader
and receives the location of the item. Its that
simple.
41US Navy More Benefits
- The RFID system also paid off by greatly
improving inventory accuracy. Previous manual
systems allowed little if any visibility to the
actual inventory on hand, and as parts were
replenished there was significant room for error.
- There are more than ten identical sites within
the Navy that operate in the same way as Norfolk.
Sercos business case analysis, provided in our
post-implementation report to the Navy, concluded
that the total annual savings the Navy reaped by
implementing this one business process
improvement across all ten sites would be in
excess of 2.2M per year. And this is for just
one small section of the Navy supply chain,
Zeller said.
42Seattle Fire Department
43Seattle FD Business Problem
- Theres a fire in a high-rise dormitory on the
University of Washington campus. Hundreds of
students are injured, some critically. Patients
are being triaged on the street and transported
to the nearest hospital. - This is one of many live-fire drills the Seattle
Fire Department (SFD) has performed to prepare
for an MCImass casualty incidents. MCIs run the
gamut from fires in large, occupied buildings to
weapons of mass destruction, but all share one
thing in common large numbers of patients being
treated and transported in a chaotic environment.
44Seattle FD - Solution
- The difference with this drill is that Seattle
Fire was testing the use of technology to help
first responders (firefighters, medics) triage,
treat and transport patients from the scene to
area hospitals. The system uses Exodus MCI
software from Asentrix Systems running on mobile
computers with radio frequency identification
(RFID) readers and RFID tags. The mobile
computers communicate instantly to the command
and trauma centers via a wireless local area
network (802.11) or wireless wide area network
(CDMA). - Under the old system, the triage officer used
white boards, grease pens and triage tags to
assign numbers to patients, record the numbers in
writing and report on patients via radio, when
necessary. Runners would be used to aggregate
patient information on paper and deliver it to
the transport officer, who would then call the
hospital and read the patient information to
them. The triage process would take approximately
30 seconds per patient and there were often
delays moving patients from treatment to
transport as the runners gathered and reported
the information and then ran back to deliver the
transport information.
45Seattle FD - Benefits
- With the new system, triage time has been cut to
10 seconds-per-patient with patient data
immediately visible to all incident command,
including the staff at the hospital. As soon as a
patient is ready, they can be moved from
treatment to transport with no delay while
waiting for information to be literally run
between areas. - The system eliminates the need for runners and
radio communications, and most importantly, it
improves patient care by dramatically reducing
the time needed to communicate vital information.
46Nancy Foods
47Nancy Foods Business Problem
- According to Siegfried, Nancys anticipated an
annual revenue loss of 300,000 to 500,000 in
large part because workers couldnt locate
work-in-process components to fill orders - Every August Nancys Specialty Foods begins to go
quiche crazy. Production in the companys Newark,
Calif., plant ramps up five-fold over normal to
prepare for the holidays. Soon there is little
freezer space to spare in the 86,000-square-foot
facility. No matter what else goes on at Nancys,
one thing will continue. You cant stop an
oven, said David Siegfried, Nancys information
technology manager. Because if ovens were to
cool, an assembly line to stall, Nancys would
begin leaching money. At times weve had from 15
to 45 people standing there in excess of an
hour, Siegfried said. Multiply that times their
pay rate, and now theyre behind. Now youve got
to pay them overtime. Falling behind risks
losing sales. When the holiday seasons last
truck leaves Nancys and product isnt ready, the
truck goes with whatever is loaded. When we sell
one time a year, if it doesnt make it there on
time, the stores say, Were not going to be able
to sell it through. Cancel the order. - Workers using the old tracking system sometimes
had trouble finding inventory. The barcode
systems manual batch-transfer methodology put
inventory records a production day behind.
48Nancys Foods - Solution
- Siegfried and his crew brought in RFID readers,
mobile computers and tags from Intermec. Stratum
Global provided its Tag-Net suite of middleware
modules. - Nancys could have made a standard upgrade to its
existing system, but Siegfried and his colleagues
saw how leaping a generation of technology could
solve more than just inventory management
problems. - Forklifts dont always play well with high-tech
electronics. But, Siegfried was asking the RFID
system to deal with the double-whammy of
forklifts operating inside freezers. Some of the
RFID equipment would be on the steel prongs of
the forklift. Intermecs 915 MHz IF4 reader with
Bluetooth serial adapter and up to four antennae
make up the fork-mounted RFID hardware.
Heavy-duty enclosures protect the electronics.
Inside the forklift cab, a vehicle-mounted
computer receives RFID tag data from the IF4 and
relays information to the host system. - When the first flavored quiche is baked on day
one of a three-pack production run, workers in
Nancys packaging area record how much of it was
made and which bin holds it. They use Intermec
700 series mobile computers with IP3 portable
RFID readers to capture data from an Intermec
RFID Intellitag attached to each bin. In
addition, Bartender Labeling software is used in
conjunction with a RFID printer to commission
tags.
49Nancys foods - Benefits
- While its too soon for concrete numbers on cost
savings, Siegfried expects Nancys to slash its
revenue losses and bank 100,000 within one year
and 300,000 over the next several years. The
money saved will offset a looming expense that
his and many other businesses soon will have to
shoulder Wal-Marts 2006 compliance mandate. - The first goal is always to eliminate
problematic situations that have their own ROI,
then deal with the mandate, Siegfried said.
50Old Dominion Freight Line
51Old Dominion Business Problem
- Nothing stops a 35-ton tractor trailer faster
than paperwork! - To keep paperwork processing delays from jamming
on the brakes of its fleet of 2,600 trucks, Old
Dominion Freight Line has developed a series of
wireless, automated dock and yard management
procedures for its 117 service centers across the
U.S. that rely on mobile computers and wireless
technology. - Old Dominion needed real-time information to help
them in many ways. They needed to cut our
transit time and improve visibility. - Need to reduce costs from holding inventory to
lowers their inventory costs, improves their
cash, and starts to lower their overall cost of
goods.
52Old Dominion - Solution
- Were really investing in IT, said Old Dominion
Vice President Chip Overbey. We dont look at it
as an expense. We look at it as an investment. - It is spending that makes better, its spending
you can get a return on investment on, and it
lets you position yourself better with your
customers. Incoming Shipment Processing As
trucks arrive at service centers, they are
automatically identified by an RFID reader. - The information is relayed to Old Dominions Dock
and Yard Management software application, which
resides on an IBM AS/400 midrange computer. The
system, which was developed in-house, looks up
the shipment information. Handling instructions
are immediately relayed to switchers, who
operate tractors in the yard to receive trailers
from the over-the-road drivers. Switchers receive
their pick-up and handling instructions by a
wireless transmission to a computer mounted in
the cab. Supervisors also receive notification of
arrivals in real time on their handheld wireless
computers.
53Old Dominion - Benefits
- Now our switchers are making a lot more moves
per hour, said Mike Nagle, Old Dominion director
of field service. Productivity has really
improved. At some locations Old Dominion has
been able to eliminate switcher labor positions
and re-deploy tractors used for the operation.
Thats been a big savings in equipment and
maintenance cost, Nagle said. - The dock-door computers and scanners help get
trucks loaded and back on the road quickly. Every
number label is scanned as the item is loaded
onto the truck. The scans automatically build a
shipment manifest record, which eliminates the
time and labor required to key enter the
information. System software verifies that each
scanned item is part of the shipment and sends an
instant wireless alert if there is a mistake.
54Old Dominion More Benefits
- We thought we would save 50 cents per bill, and
were doing better than that, Nagle said. These
systems typically pay for themselves within eight
to 11 months after theyre installed. The
systems also are providing all the company-wide
soft benefits that Old Dominion expected and
planned for but cant measure, including better
management information, lower overall delivery
times, higher labor productivity and improved
customer service. - Having real-time information helps us in many
ways, Overbey said. If we can cut our transit
time and improve visibility, thats where we
start providing real value-add for our customers.
If they can go from holding five days of
inventory to two days, it lowers their inventory
costs, improves their cash, and starts to lower
their overall cost of goods.