Impinj IPJR640 RFID Integrated Reader, IPJR640 User Manual Impinj installation and operations guide 2

Impinj, Inc. RFID Integrated Reader, IPJR640 Impinj installation and operations guide 2

Users Manual

     UHF Gen 2 RFID Speedway® Revolution  Installation and Operations Guide
Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    i Products Covered by this Guide This guide pertains to readers with the following part numbers:  Table i: Speedway Reader Part Numbers Reader Communication Code Part Number Speedway R220 FCC IPJ-REV-R220-USA1M1 Speedway R420 FCC IPJ-REV-R420-USA1M1 Speedway R220 ETSI IPJ-REV-R220-EU11M1 Speedway R420 ETSI IPJ-REV-R420-EU11M1 Speedway R220 Various IPJ-REV-R220-GX11M1 Speedway R420 Various IPJ-REV-R420-GX11M1 Speedway R640 FCC IPJR640 Speedway R640 ETSI IPJ-REV-R640-EU1M1 Speedway R640 Various IPJ-REV-R640-GX11M1     Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Compliance This equipment was tested and complies with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy. If not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, the equipment may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation and cause harmful interference to radio or television reception. To determine if this equipment causes harmful interference to radio or television reception, turn the equipment off and on. You are encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following: • Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. • Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. • Consult the dealer or a qualified radio/TV technician for assistance.   Caution:  Changes to this product or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void your authority to operate per FCC Part 15.    Industry Canada (IC) Compliance Operation is subject to the following two conditions:  (1) This device may not cause interference.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  ii    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc (2) This device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device. This device has been designed to operate with the antenna(s) listed on page 32 that have a maximum gain of 6 dB. Antennas not included in this list or having a gain greater than 6 dB are strictly prohibited for use with this device. The required antenna impedance is 50 ohms. To reduce potential radio interference to other users, the antenna type and its gain should be chosen so that the equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) is not more than that permitted for successful communication. The term “IC” before the radio certification number only signifies that Industry of Canada technical specifications were met.   CE Marking and European Economic Area       (EEA) RFID devices designed for use throughout the EEA must have a maximum radiated transmit power of 2W ERP in the frequency range of 865.6–867.6 MHz. For other EEA restrictions on RFID device use, please refer to the Impinj Declaration of Conformity (DoC) located at support.impinj.com.  Before You Begin  Warning: Please read this document in its entirety before operating the Speedway Revolution reader, as serious personal injury or equipment damage may result from improper use. Unauthorized opening of the Speedway Revolution reader enclosure voids the warranty. To safeguard personnel, be sure to position all antenna(s) according to the specified requirements for your regulatory region. For details, see “Appendix A: Information Specific to Regions of Operation” on page 33.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    iii   Table&of&Contents&Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Compliance........................................i!Industry Canada (IC) Compliance ..............................................................................i!CE Marking and European Economic Area............................................................... ii!Before You Begin ...................................................................................................... ii!Chapter 1: Introduction..................................................................................................1!About this Guide .........................................................................................................1!Intended Audience ....................................................................................................1!Other Documents of Interest .....................................................................................1!Impinj Support Information ........................................................................................2!Introduction to Speedway® Revolution.....................................................................3!Speedway xPortal – Integrated Portal Reader .........................................................4!Requirements for Using Speedway Revolution .......................................................4!Environmental Requirement......................................................................................4!Hardware Requirements ...........................................................................................4!Power Requirements.................................................................................................5!Supported Operating Environments ..........................................................................5!Supported Communication Protocol..........................................................................6!Antenna Requirements..............................................................................................6!Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting Speedway Revolution.....................................7!Speedway Revolution Ports and LEDs .....................................................................7!Installing and Connecting the Reader ......................................................................8!Detailed Installation Procedures ...............................................................................9!Step 1: Position the Speedway Revolution Reader and (optionally) Mount the Reader.......................................................................................................................9!Step 2: Connect the Antenna(s) to the Speedway Revolution Reader .....................9!Step 3: Power the Reader .......................................................................................10!Step 4: Connect Speedway Revolution to the Network...........................................11!Step 5: Test the Installed Reader............................................................................13!Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring Speedway Revolution ...............................14!Configuring Speedway Revolution .........................................................................14!
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 iv    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Device Configuration ...............................................................................................14!RF Configuration .....................................................................................................15!Monitoring Speedway Revolution ...........................................................................19!Viewing Network Parameters and Statistics............................................................19!Viewing RFID Parameters and Statistics ................................................................20!Configuring and Viewing Speedway Revolution Logs.............................................21!Viewing the State of the Speedway Revolution Device...........................................21!Chapter 4: Upgrading the Speedway Revolution Firmware..................................22!A Brief Overview of the Speedway Revolution Firmware........................................22!Upgrading the Firmware..........................................................................................22!Upgrading the Firmware with a USB Drive..............................................................24!Upgrading the Firmware through the Impinj Management Web UI .........................24!Chapter 5: Troubleshooting.....................................................................................27!Returning to the Factory Default Configuration .......................................................27!To use Rshell to return the reader to its factory default configuration and leaving CAP intact: ..............................................................................................................27!To use the FDR button on the reader to restore to its factory default configuration:................................................................................................................................27!Submitting Diagnostic Data for Analysis by Impinj Technical Support ..............29!To capture data to a Reader Diagnostic Data file: ..................................................29!Appendix A: Information Specific to Regions of Operation .................................31!Operation in North America .....................................................................................31!Frequency Plan .......................................................................................................31!Antenna Requirements............................................................................................31!Operation in European Union ..................................................................................33!Frequency Plan .......................................................................................................33!Antenna Requirements............................................................................................33!Operation in Other Global Regions.........................................................................34!Appendix B: GPIO Details ........................................................................................42!Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation ...........................................................45!RF Beam Pattern.....................................................................................................45!Mounting the xPortal ...............................................................................................45!Conduit Attachment.................................................................................................47!
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 1: Introduction Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    1 Chapter 1: Introduction About this Guide This guide provides detailed instructions for installing, connecting, configuring, operating, upgrading, and troubleshooting the Speedway Revolution or xPortal reader. To minimize and streamline this guide, the content focuses on the installation and operation of a single reader. Intended Audience The intended audience for this guide is anyone installing a Speedway Revolution or xPortal reader. The assumption is however, that the primary users of this guide are systems engineers and IT personnel with experience and basic knowledge of: • Software development • Hardware systems integration • Network connectivity In addition this guide assumes that the user has a high-level understanding of RFID and RFID systems management as well as a basic familiarity with the EPCglobal Gen 2 specification.  Other Documents of Interest This guide is part of a larger documentation set that supports Speedway Revolution. The document set includes the following seven documents:  • Speedway Revolution Getting Started Guide Is a one-page guide included with the Speedway Revolution reader. It provides basic information about the hardware as well as instructions for obtaining additional documentation, firmware upgrades and downloads, and other support software. • Impinj LTK Programmer’s Guide Provides software engineers guidelines and best practices for working with the Low Level Reader Protocol (LLRP) Toolkit. In addition to this guide, software engineers can access language-specific reference guides and sample applications illustrating the scenarios discussed in the Programmer’s Guide. • Octane LLRP Is intended for software engineers and describes the LLRP capabilities supported by Speedway Revolution, which includes Impinj’s custom LLRP extensions.     Note: Octane is the name for the Speedway Revolution firmware. • Rshell Reference Manual Describes the syntax and command language for the Speedway Revolution Rshell Console.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 1: Introduction 2    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. • Octane SNMP Guide Provides monitoring and reference information for working with the SNMP MIBs related to Speedway Revolution (the standard TCP/IP networking MIB (MIB-II) and a subset of the standard EPCglobal RM MIB). • Firmware Upgrade Reference Manual Includes detailed procedures, reference information for upgrading firmware installed on single readers, and procedures for creating a metafile to automate upgrading of multiple readers. • Speedway Revolution Embedded Developer’s Guide Provides a high-level description of the Speedway Revolution platform and a high-level view of its architecture for software engineers designing custom application software for the reader. Impinj Support Information Visit the Impinj Support Web site at support.impinj.com for information about obtaining technical assistance. For guidelines on capturing data for analysis by Impinj technical support personnel, see page 31.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 1: Introduction Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    3  Introduction to Speedway® Revolution         Speedway® Revolution is a stationary, small form factor, UHF Gen2 RFID tag reader that provides network connectivity between tag data and enterprise system software. Speedway Revolution is built with the same industry leading quality, high performance, and excellent reliability of Impinj’s original Speedway reader. Speedway Revolution offers a variety of new features that increase its application flexibility:    • Low Power Usage With a low power design, Speedway Revolution is capable of using Power over Ethernet (PoE). Using PoE simplifies deployment and dramatically reduces costs and greenhouse gas emissions of your RFID infrastructure. Using PoE does not compromise Speedway Revolution performance. It delivers the full 30 dBm transmit power (Note – using a AC/DC power module, maximum transmit power is +32.5dBm). Speedway Revolution supports the IEEE standard 802.3af (for PoE). • Compact Form Factor The compact size of Speedway Revolution (7.4 x 6.9 x 1.2 in) eases installation in tight spaces and embedded applications. • Availability of Two Models Impinj offers two Speedway Revolution models, with different high performance monostatic (transmitter and receiver utilize the same port) antenna port configurations. The model R220 is a two-port configuration and the R420 (shown above) is a four-port configuration. • High Performance Features Speedway Revolution utilizes a variety of high performance features making it possible to read more than 1100 tags per second. Features include Autoset, Low Duty Cycle, dynamic antenna switching, inventory search modes that improve tag population management, and receive sensitivity filtering for read-zone confinement. • Ease of Use Features Figure 1.0 Speedway Revolution Reader
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 1: Introduction 4    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Speedway Revolution uses industry-standard application interfaces, simplifying its integration with RFID middleware or custom software solutions. In addition, it offers enterprise-class management and monitoring capability. • Robust Reader Design Just like its Speedway predecessor, Speedway Revolution uses a single circuit board design that delivers field-proven, enterprise-class quality and reliability. Speedway xPortal (IPJR640)     The newest member of the Speedway family is xPortal integrated portal reader. xPortal incorporates the Speedway Revolution reader with innovative Dual-Linear Phased Array (DLPA) antenna technology in a compact, easy-to-install package. The Speedway xPortal delivers superior performance and unmatched installation versatility for RFID read points at doorways, hallways and general zone coverage in retail, office, hospitality and healthcare environments.   The detail of configuring and using the xPortal is identical to the Speedway R220 or R420 readers, so following sections apply to the xPortal.  Appendix C provides the unique installation and cabling hookup instructions for the xPortal on page 46.   The xPortal is an integrated solution with the maximum reader-transmit power set at the factory to comply with country of operation regulations.  For usage in the USA or Canada under FCC rules this is 28.5dBm (xPortal’s antenna gain is 7.5dBi).     Requirements for Using Speedway Revolution This section describes key requirements for operating and interfacing with a Speedway Revolution reader. Environmental Requirement • Operating temperature: -20º C to +50º C (non-condensing) Hardware Requirements • TCP/IP network equipment is required to connect the reader to a PC (Windows, Mac, or Linux), or other network terminal. Figure1.2 Speedway xPortal Reader
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 1: Introduction Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    5 • Connecting to the reader console port requires a Cisco type management cable (RJ-45 to DB9) and either a RS-232 serial port or serial to USB adapter on the PC. • Impinj-approved UHF RFID antenna(s), including associated RF cable(s) with RP-TNC male connector interface. Power Requirements There are two options for powering your Speedway Revolution reader:  1. Power-Over-Ethernet (PoE)  2. An external universal AC to DC power supply.  PoE offers the most efficient power consumption and supports up to +30 dBm. An external universal power supply supports up to +32.5 dBm. Operating above +30dBm requires professional installation. See “Appendix A: Information Specific to Regions of Operation” on page 33 for details. If you are using a universal power supply module, you must use the Impinj approved part, number IPJ-A2001-000, which supplies +24V DC. Available AC power cords are: • IPJ-A2051-USA (for North America) • IPJ-A2051-EU1 (for European Union) • IPJ-A2051-BRA (for Brazil) • IPJ-A2051-CHN (for China) • IPJ-A2051-JPN (for Japan) • IPJ-A2051-RSA (for South Africa) Ordering the universal power supply and power cords from Impinj is simple and efficient. Supported Operating Environments This section describes the environments in which you can access the Speedway Revolution Rshell console used for configuring, monitoring, and maintaining the reader. The tools you use when accessing the Rshell console depend on how you connect your PC to the reader: serial connection (RS-232) or Ethernet connection (SSH/Telnet). On PCs running Microsoft Windows, you can now use Putty for both types of connections.  Table 1.1: Supported Operating Environments Recommended Tools  Interface Protocol Microsoft Windows Linus Ethernet SSH-Port 22 Telnet-Port 23 Putty 1 SSH or Telnet Serial RS-232 Putty (version 0.60 and higher supports serial) Minicom 1. http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 1: Introduction 6    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Supported Communication Protocol For client control of the reader, Speedway Revolution supports the EPCglobal Low Level Reader Protocol (LLRP) v1.0.1. LLRP is an EPCglobal standard interface allowing communication with the reader, which in turn reads EPCglobal Gen 2 RFID tags.  Antenna Requirements Depending on the reader model you are installing, Speedway Revolution is equipped with two (R220) or four (R420) independent, bidirectional, and full duplex TX/RX monostatic antenna ports . Antenna requirements vary by regulatory region. For details about the requirements in a specific region, see the relevant antenna section in “Appendix A: Information Specific to Regions of Operation” on page 33.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    7 Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting Speedway Revolution This chapter provides details about the Speedway Revolution I/O ports and status LEDs, and explains how to install the reader and connect it to your network. Speedway Revolution Ports and LEDs The following graphic illustrates the I/O ports located on the Speedway Revolution reader. This graphic illustrates a Speedway R420, which includes four antenna ports (not visible in this view).  Note: Both Speedway R420 and R220 models have the same exterior ports with one exception; the R220 includes two antenna ports where the Speedway R420 includes four antenna ports.             Figure 2.1 Speedway Revolution R420 Port Connections  Note: See “Appendix B: GPIO Details” for functional and electrical specifications and details for each pin of the GPIO DB-15 connectors on page 44. Antenna ports and LED status indicators are located on the back panel of the reader. The Speedway R420 graphic below illustrates their locations:       Figure 2.2: Speedway Revolution R420 Antenna Ports and Status LEDs   Factory Default Restore button USB 1.1 Device (for future use) Console RJ-45 connector  (RS-232) USB 1.1 Host (for future use) +24VDC locking connector powered via external power 10/100 base-T Ethernet (Power over Ethernet) GPIO DB-15 4 inputs, 4 outputs with serial RS-232 Four RP-TCN RF antenna connectors (R420) (R220 has two antenna connectors) Reader Status LED Antenna 4 and its status LED Antenna 3 and its status LED Antenna 2 and its status LED Antenna 1 and its status LED Power status LED
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting  8    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. The following table describes the LED behavior for various reader states:  Table 2.1: Reader Operations and Associated LED Behavior Reader Operation LED Expected Behavior Power Solid red Power applied, attempting to start boot code  Status  Off Power Solid green Bootloader calling firm- ware image Status Off Power Solid green Startup (power on),  normal completion Bootloader completed  successfully, reader is ready  Status  Solid green Power Turns off Factory Default Restore button pressed Status Off Startup (reset), normal completion   Factory Default Restore button pressed for 3 seconds   Power Blinks once (red), indicates a configuration default restore will occur Power Continuous blinking red Startup (failure) Hardware problems detected, unable to boot Status Off Upgrade activity Upgrading the firmware during boot process  Status Alternates between red and green Detects no activity on antenna port  Antenna  Off Detection of antenna activity Detects antenna transmission activity on antenna port   Antenna   Solid green Inventory activity Performing an inventory operation  Status Blinks orange, blinks faster as tag volume increases LLRP activity Active LLRP connection Status Double blink pattern (green) LLRP activity Disconnected operation Status Single blink pattern (green)    Installing and Connecting the Reader The primary installation and connection steps for Speedway Revolution are: 1. Position the reader appropriately for your environment. This may or may not involve mounting the reader. 2. Connect the antenna(s) to the appropriate ports on the reader. 3. Connect power to the reader. 4. Connect the reader to the network. 5. Test the reader installation by reading tags.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    9 Detailed Installation Procedures This section provides the details for each installing and connecting step. Step 1: Position the Speedway Revolution Reader and (optionally) Mount the Reader Choose the appropriate location for the reader. Ideally you should always keep the unit away from direct sunlight, high humidity, extreme temperatures, and sources of electromagnetic interference. Any combination of these conditions may degrade performance or shorten the life of the unit. Because the Speedway Reader supports Power over Ethernet (PoE), the reader can obtain its electrical power with data via standard cable in an Ethernet network.  If you plan to power the reading using an external universal power supply, confirm there is a standard 120 or 220 VAC outlet nearby. Depending on your environment, you may need to mount the reader to a wall or another object. To mount the Speedway Revolution reader: 1. Locate the four mounting slots on the reader, as illustrated below:  Figure 2.2 Speedway Revolution Mounting Locations 2. Using 1/4" - 20 or M6 screws, secure the unit: mount the reader either horizontally or vertically.  Caution: If there is any chance of dust or water exposure, you should mount the reader so that the Ethernet, USB, Console and GPIO ports are facing down to prevent ingress. Step 2: Connect the Antenna(s) to the Speedway Revolution Reader Depending on the Speedway Revolution model you are installing, the reader has either two antenna ports (R220) or four antenna ports (R420). Each port is independent, bidirectional, and full duplex TX/RX (monostatic).  Warning: You must use Impinj-approved antennas with Speedway Revolution. See “Appendix A: Information Specific to Regions of Operation” on page 33 for a
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting  10    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. detailed list of approved vendors. Using any other antenna may adversely affect performance or damage the reader. Speedway Revolution requires professional installation to correctly set the TX power for the RF cable and antenna selected.  To connect the antenna(s) to Speedway Revolution: 1. Position each reader antenna, keeping the following points in mind: • Position the antenna(s) to achieve the most effective and efficient tag reads. • Position the antenna(s) to maximize operator safety. Personnel should remain at a safe distance at all times. See “Appendix A: Information Specific to Regions of Operation” on page 33 for the specific requirements for your regulatory region. 2. Mount the antenna(s) according to the instructions provided by the antenna manufacturer. 3. Attach the antenna cable(s) to the antenna port(s) on the reader. Choose any port for any antenna. Finger-tighten each connection, making sure the connection is secure. The antenna cable is properly tightened when you are no longer able to twist the cable inside the connector.  Note: A loose connection negatively impacts the performance of the antenna.  Caution: Impinj designed the Speedway Revolution antenna ports to be self-terminating. It is important that you do not terminate unused antenna ports. Leave them unconnected. Step 3: Power the Reader You have two choices for powering Speedway Revolution: • Power over Ethernet (PoE) • external universal power supply If your network switch is PoE-enabled, the reader will power on when you connect it to the network. If you are using an external universal power supply, connect the AC power plug into a suitable 100–240 VAC, 50–60 Hz power outlet. The boot sequence begins in either case when power is supplied to the reader. This sequence typically completes within 30 seconds. Once the boot sequence finishes, the reader accepts commands, not before. The Power and Status LEDs on the reader alert you the status. See Table 2.1 on page 8 for details. ! Important: If a reader is receiving power via PoE and the reader detects that an external universal power supply has been connected, the reader reboots and switches to the external universal power supply source. If, however, the reader is receiving power via an external universal power supply and detects the connection to a PoE-enabled network switch, nothing changes. The reader continues to receive power from the external supply. The external universal power supply always takes precedence over PoE because the universal power supply is capable of higher power if both sources are connected.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    11 Step 4: Connect Speedway Revolution to the Network You are now ready to connect the installed Speedway Revolution to your network. You have two options: • If your network supports DHCP, you can connect the reader directly to your Ethernet network. Once the reader is powered, immediately communicate with it via Telnet (TCP/IP). • If your network does not support DHCP, you will need to connect a PC directly to the reader using an RS-232 serial connection. Use the reader’s Rshell command line interface to configure a static IP address for the reader. Once completed, you will be able to connect the reader to your Ethernet network. Details for completing each connection option are discussed below. Before proceeding, make note of the reader’s factory default network settings:  Table 2.2: Default Network Settings  Settings Description  Hostname Speedway R-XX-XX-XX where XX-XX-XX is the last three bytes of the reader’s MAC address (which is printed on the version label attached to the reader case. DHCP Enabled. The reader also reports its hostname to the DHCP server.  To connect Speedway Revolution to the Ethernet network: • Using a standard Ethernet cable, connect the RJ-45 connector on the reader to a LAN drop or network switch. A typical network configuration is illustrated below:   Figure 2.3 Connecting Speedway Revolution to the Ethernet Network   Note: If you need to connect a PC directly to the Ethernet port, you can use a standard Ethernet cable. A crossover cable is not necessary.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting  12    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. To connect Speedway Revolution to your PC over a serial connection: 1. Confirm you have the latest version of Putty, a free and reliable SSH, Telnet, and serial client. Version 0.60 or higher contains support for serial connections. 2. Using a Cisco style Console cable RJ-45 to DB9, Impinj part number IPJ-A4000-000, connect your PC’s valid/active COM port to the serial port on the reader as illustrated below:   Figure 2.4 Speedway Revolution Serial Connection  3. Power up the reader and wait for the boot sequence to complete. (See “Step 3: Power the Reader” on page 10.) 4. On the PC, run the Putty application and select the Serial connection option. Verify that Serial line to connect to is set to COM1 (may be another COM port if you are using a serial to USB adapter)  5. Set Speed to 115200.  6. Set Flow control to None.   Figure 2.5 Putty Configuration Settings
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 2: Installing and Connecting Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    13  7. Select Open. The Rshell console window opens. 8. Press Enter. The Rshell login prompt appears.   Figure 2.6 COM1 Putty Login Prompt  9. Log in with the following default credentials unless you customized them: User Name: root Password: impinj 10. When the Rshell command line prompt appears, begin configuring the network settings for the reader. See “Using Rshell to Configure Network Settings for Speedway Revolution” on page 14 for details. 11. When you have completed configuration of the appropriate network settings, connect the reader to your Ethernet network as described on page 11.  Note: If you decide to connect to DHCP after connecting serially, remember to use Rshell to change the IP address on the reader from static to dynamic. See “Using Rshell to Configure Network Settings for Speedway Revolution” on page 15 for details.  Step 5: Test the Installed Reader Confirm connections and functionality is correct by reading tags. Using the MultiReader, a Windows PC test application from Impinj, you can quickly verify reader operation by configuring various reader parameters and running simple inventory operations. For details about how to access and use MultiReader, see page 15.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring  14    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring Speedway Revolution This chapter provides a high-level view of the configuration and monitoring options available for Speedway Revolution. Configuring Speedway Revolution You can think of Speedway Revolution configuration in two categories: configuring the device itself and configuring the reader’s RF behavior. This chapter provides the basics for each type of configuration. Device Configuration Rshell is a proprietary command line management interface for configuring and managing network settings, firmware upgrades, and other device-oriented operations. This chapter introduces the Rshell commands for installing and connecting the reader. Rshell Reference Manual provides full details and syntax for all Rshell commands.  Note: Rshell is a machine interface and is almost always backward-compatible with previous Speedway Revolution versions. Existing inputs and outputs will never change. When adding new commands, new optional arguments will be added at the end.  ! Important: The Speedway Revolution version of RShell is not 100% compatible with the original Speedway reader. Using Rshell to Configure Network Settings for Speedway Revolution You can often get up and running with little or no configuration using the default configuration settings in Speedway Revolution. If you are not using DHCP to assign IP addresses, you will need to configure a few of the reader’s network settings. The following procedure outlines the Rshell commands you may need for connecting the reader to your network. To configure the reader’s network settings: 1. Open the Rshell console (see page 12 for details). 2. View the reader’s current configuration settings by entering the show network summary command at the Rshell command prompt: > show network summary Status='0,Success' PrimaryInterface='eth0' ActiveInterface='eth0' Hostname='SpeedwayR-00-00-B9' connectionStatus='Connected' ipAddressMode='Dynamic' ipAddress='10.0.10.41' ipMask='255.255.0.0' gatewayAddress='10.0.0.10' broadcastAddress='10.0.255.255' LLAStatus='enabled'
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    15 3. Configure the appropriate TCP/IP parameters for your environment. The applicable commands are: • Setting Hostname > config network hostname <HOSTNAME> • Setting Static IP Address > config network ip static <IP ADDRESS>  <NETMASK> <GATEWAY>     Note: The IP address is required; the other parameters are optional.  The default value is used if an optional parameter is omitted from the ip command. • Enabling DHCP > config network ip dynamic • Configuring NTP Servers > config network ntp add <NTP SERVER ADDRESS> 4. After successfully configuring all required network settings, connect the reader to the network via the Speedway Revolution Ethernet port. RF Configuration Configuring your reader’s RF behavior depends entirely on your implementation approach. You may be using a custom software application, middleware running on a server, or some other approach. MultiReader (see below) is an example of a PC client application. Regardless of the application you’re using, the underlying protocol is the same—Low-Level Reader Protocol (LLRP).  LLRP is a standard, asymmetric, binary protocol used for communication between a client application and the reader. LLRP controls the configuration of the antenna transmit power, the receive sensitivity, the operating reader, and more. For details about LLRP, see one or more of the following documents: • LLRP Standard: This document provides the specifics of the EPCglobal-ratified LLRP standard. http://www.epcglobalinc.org/standards/llrp/llrp_1_0_1-standard-20070813.pdf • Octane LLRP: Provides details of the LLRP capabilities supported by Speedway Revolution. It also describes custom LLRP extensions added by Impinj. • Impinj LTK Programmer’s Guide: Is intended for software engineers and provides guidelines and best practices for working with the LLRP Toolkit. In addition, software engineers can access language-specific reference guides and sample applications illustrating the scenarios discussed in the Programmer’s Guide. Using MultiReader to Configure and Test Speedway Revolution Impinj provides a simple, easy-to-use LLRP application for configuring and testing the basic RF behavior of Speedway Revolution. The MultiReader application is available from the Impinj support Web site (support.impinj.com). MultiReader version 6.4.X supports features available with Octane 4.4.X firmware. To use MultiReader, your computer must be running Microsoft Windows XP.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring  16    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    Note: MultiReader will install and operate on Windows7, but is not fully tested and supported. We recommend MultiReader for test purposes only.  This section covers connecting to and configuring a reader’s RF parameters using MultiReader. It also provides a high-level description of each parameter.  To configure and test a reader from within MultiReader: 1. Install and launch the MultiReader application. The following screen displays:  Figure 3.1 MultiReader initial screen 2. Select Configure Settings. The Reader Settings screen displays:  Figure 3.2 Multireader Reader Settings Connection Screen
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    17 3. Connect to the reader by doing the following: 4. In Name or IP Address, type the reader’s IP address or hostname. You can determine the name and the IP address via the Rshell show network summary command.  Note: The show network summary command provides the dynamic values returned by DHCP or LLA if the current configuration is dynamic. The local hostname resolution feature (mDNS) gives the reader a local hostname in addition to an IP address as its network identity. On an isolated network that lacks DNS service but has mDNS enabled, a reader with hostname speedway-00-01-02, for example, may be reached using speedway-00-01-02.local. 5. In Model, select the appropriate Speedway Revolution model (either Speedway R220 or Speedway R420). If you want MultiReader to issue a warning if it detects a model other than what is configured, confirm Warn on the model mismatch checkbox is selected. (Model mismatch is selected by default.) 6. Configure the key RF parameters described below: 7. Under Reader 1, on the left side of the Reader Settings dialog box, select Modes, RF, and Power. The following screen appears:   Figure 3.3 Multireader Reader Settings Settings Screen  8. In Reader Mode, select AutoSet Dense Reader. The Reader Mode specifies the rules to use for communication between the reader and tag. With AutoSet Dense enabled, the reader automatically senses the environment and adjusts its mode accordingly. 9. In Search Mode, select Dual Target. In Session, select Session 1. Search Mode and Session work together to control when and how often the reader reads a tag.  The high-level functional description for the reader is: Each tag contains a flag that is flipped from A to B or from B to A when it is
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring  18    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. read. The Session value controls how long the flag retains its value before reverting back to the original tag value. Search Mode controls which flag values the reader reads and, in some cases, what happens to the flag value once the tag is read.  With Dual Target, the reader reads all the tags with A flags, after reading the tags the reader flips each tag to B. When there are no more A tags to read, the reader reads all the B tags, flipping each one to A after it has been read. It continues this process back and forth from A to B and back to A. Session 1 ensures a persistence period that prevents tags from reverting before they have all been read. 10. On the right of the screen is a checkbox for each of the reader’s antenna ports. By default, all antennas are enabled. Deselect the checkbox for any port without a connected antenna. Leaving all ports enabled does no harm, but does waste processing time because the reader reads all enabled ports. The reader verifies the presence of an antenna before attempting to activate it. 11. Set the appropriate transmit power, Tx Power, and receive sensitivity, Rx Sensitivity, for each enabled antenna. Transmit power controls the power of the signal leaving the antenna and the signal range. The optimal setting depends on many things: • how you are powering the reader • cable length connecting the antenna to the reader  • number of antennas in the area  • anticipated distance between the antenna and the tags Use the default value of 30 dBm for testing purposes. Receive sensitivity controls the tag signal threshold below which the tag is ignored by the reader. This parameter is useful in mitigating stray reads. Stray tags often have a weaker signal than the tags to be read. The Max checkbox is selected by default, and tells the reader to read all tags, regardless of the tag’s signal strength. This is known as its Received Signal Strength Indicator—or RSSI.  When configuring a specific receive sensitivity, deselect the Max checkbox, and then type the value you want for each connected antenna. The maximum sensitivity is -80. Remember, you are simply configuring the reader to test your installation. Adjust these settings later when you begin using the reader in a live RFID operation if desired. 12. Select Apply. MultiReader displays a progress bar as it connects to the reader. When the connection completes, the following status appears at the bottom of the application:  Figure 3.4 Multireader Status Display
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    19 13. Test your reader installation. Place one or more tags in the read-zone of one or more of the attached antennas. Select START Inventory. Tag reads appear in the large gray area on the left:  Figure 3.5 Multireader Tag Inventory Display  In this case, the reader detected five tags. Because the search mode is Dual Target, the reader continuously reads the tags, first reading the A flags, and then reading the B flags. Notice in the above image that one of the tag entries is a pinkish color. The tag entry changes to red when a tag is not actively read. For example, if you change the Search Mode to Single Target with Suppression, the reader reads each tag only once. All five entries would quickly turn red and stay red as shown below.   Figure 3.6Multireader Tag Inventory Aging Display  If you see tag data appearing in MultiReader, your reader is most likely installed correctly and the antennas are functioning properly. If you don’t see all the tags you placed in the read-zone, try moving the tags to a slightly different location or orientation. 14. Select STOP Inventory Run to stop the tag inventory process. Monitoring Speedway Revolution Use Rshell to monitor the reader health and performance when Speedway Revolution is up and running. This section presents the primary Rshell commands for viewing the network and RFID statistics, plus the reader logs. For details about these commands, see the Rshell Reference Manual.  Speedway Revolution also supports industry standard SNMP, with MIB2 and EPCglobal Reader Management MIB. For more information, see the Octane SNMP Guide. Viewing Network Parameters and Statistics Use the Rshell show network command to display networking parameters and statistics. Using this command with the indicated parameters, you can view the following information:
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring  20    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Table 3.1: Show network Command Parameters Parameter Displayed Information dhcp Summary of DHCP client configuration dhcp Summary of DNS settings icmp ICMP statistics ip IP statistics ntp Summary of NTP settings summary Summary of network settings tcp TCP statistics udp UDP statistics  For details about the specific settings and statistics available for each of these parameters, see the Rshell Reference Manual. Viewing RFID Parameters and Statistics Use the Rshell show rfid stat command to display a reader’s RFID parameters and statistics. Using this command with the appropriate parameter, you can view information shown in the Parameter and display table below.  Table 3.2: Partial listing of show rfid stat parameters Parameter Displayed Information ReaderOperationalStatus Indicates whether RFID applications are running on the reader Antenna<n>OperationalStatus Indicates if an antenna is physically connected to the reader and operating properly. Note that <n> indicates the antenna port on the reader (1-4). Antenna<n>EnergizedTime Indicates the time that antenna<n> has been powered, in milliseconds. Antenna<n>UniqueInventory-Count Indicates the number of unique tags seen at antenna<n> Antenna<n>TotalInventory-Count Indicates the total inventory count for antenna<n> Antenna<n>ReadCount Indicates the number of tags read at antenna<n> that matched the configured filters. Antenna<n>FailedReadCount Indicates the number of tags where a read was attempted at antenna<n> because the tag matched the configured filter, but the read failed. Table 3.2 shows a sample of the available RFID statistics. For the full list as well as syntax details, see the Rshell Reference Manual.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 3: Configuring and Monitoring Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    21  Note: View Statistics on the LLRP interface between the reader and a client by entering the show rfid llrp stat command. The Rshell Reference Manual provides details. Configuring and Viewing Speedway Revolution Logs Speedway Revolution uses the standard Syslog protocol to forward its logged events to a remote Syslog server. The reader stores the logged events in its file system, accumulating and persisting this information across reboots. Logs are classified into three categories: Management, RFID, and System. All logged events have an associated severity level. There are eight possible levels listed in decreasing order from most severe to least severe: • Emergency • Alert • Critical • Error • Warning • Notice • Info • Debug Configure the log levels you want to display. The reader then retains only the events with a severity greater than or equal to the configured level. For example, if you choose a logging level of Warning, then the logs will contain the following levels: Warning, Error, Critical, Alert, and Emergency.  Note: Regardless of the configured log level, the reader retains all Error level logs and higher in an independent error log. Use the Rshell config logging command to configure options for the storage and forwarding of logged events. Use the show logging command to display the logging configuration as well as the actual logged information in text form. For details about these commands, see the Rshell Reference Manual. Viewing the State of the Speedway Revolution Device To display information about the current state of the reader itself, use the Rshell show system command. Using this command allows viewing the following statistics: • A summary of system information—show system summary • Platform memory usage and available application space—show system cpu • Generic platform statistics—show system platform For more details about the show system command, see the Rshell Reference Manual.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 4: Upgrading Firmware  22    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Chapter 4: Upgrading the Speedway Revolution Firmware    Speedway Revolution contains firmware known as Octane. The current version of Octane is 4.4. This chapter details manually upgrading a single reader. In addition to supporting upgrade procedures, Speedway Revolution also provides methods for reverting firmware to a previous valid image and restoring firmware to factory default settings. The procedure for reverting to the previous valid image is explained in this chapter, while returning to factory defaults is explained in Chapter 5. A Brief Overview of the Speedway Revolution Firmware To minimize downtime and maximize the robust handling of possible upgrade failures, Speedway Revolution contains dual images of its firmware. When requesting a firmware image upgrade, the reader continues to operate using the primary image. In the background, Speedway Revolution upgrades the secondary image. When the upgrade completes, the reader reboots to the newly upgraded image. Speedway Revolution retains the previous firmware version in case there are problems with the upgrade. There are three individual partitions within each firmware image that logically organize the system software. Although you do not need a full understanding of this architecture to perform a simple manual upgrade, it is a good idea to be familiar with its structure at a high level. For a more in-depth discussion of the firmware and how firmware is organized, see the Embedded Developer’s Guide. The three partitions in firmware are: • System Operating Partition (SOP)—The SOP is the primary system partition of the Speedway Revolution reader. It contains the Linux kernel, FPGA firmware, RFID management software, reader management software (Rshell), logging management software, firmware upgrade control, system watchdog software, and the factory default data. • System Persistent Partition (SPP)—Files in this partition are automatically generated and maintained by the software running on the reader. It contains the reader configuration (network settings, LLRP configuration, log settings, and so on), reader logs, and debug information used by Impinj engineers. • Custom Application Partition (CAP)—CAP partition contains custom application software, other items required by the custom application (extra libraries or tools, and configuration files), plus custom application logs. Upgrading the Firmware Speedway Revolution provides three methods for upgrading: • using Rshell, command line interface • copying the firmware to a USB memory drive and plugging into the reader’s host port • via the web interface
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 4: Upgrading Firmware Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    23 Upgrading the Firmware using Rshell: 1. Obtain the firmware upgrade file from the Impinj support Web site, support.impinj.com. The upgrade file extension is .upg. (for example octane_4_4_0.upg). 2. Place the upgrade file on a server (http, tftp, or ftp) accessible by the reader you are upgrading. 3. Using the Putty application, connect the reader using telnet, SSH or serial and log in. 4. From the Rshell command prompt, issue the following command:     >config image upgrade <URI>  Where <URI> is the server location and name of the upgrade file.  For example: >config image upgrade http://usacorp/rfid/reader/image/ octane_4_4_0.upg >config image upgrade ftp://anonymous:abc@myserver/ ftpdirecotry/octane_4_4_0.upg.upg >tftp://server/octane_4_4_0.upg   5. After starting the upgrade, view the upgrade status at any time by issuing the following command: >show image summary 6. This command provides a display of the current upgrade status, the last operation, the status of the last operation, and information about the primary and secondary images. Reissue the show image summary command if you want to track the upgrade status. Some status values you may see are: WaitingForImageFileTransfer WaitingForCommitImage WaitingToActivateImmediate The upgrade is complete when the UpgradeStatus parameter value is    Ready.  The LastOperation parameter should be WaitingToActivateImmediate and the LastOperationStatus should be WaitingForManualReboot. 7. Reboot the reader by issuing the following command:  >reboot Speedway Revolution reboot process displays messages in the Rshell console as it goes through each stage of the process. The reboot completes then the reader login prompt appears on the console. The reader status light displays solid green. LED reader reboot behavior details are provided on page 8.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 4: Upgrading Firmware  24    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Upgrading the Firmware with a USB Drive Speedway Revolution running Octane 4.4 and later supports upgrading the firmware using a USB drive. First, obtain the firmware upgrade file from the Impinj support Web site, support.impinj.com. The upgrade file extension is .upg. (for example octane_4_4_0.upg). Preparing the USB Drive for upgrade 1. Insert a USB drive into your computer. 2. Create an Impinj directory in the root of the USB drive along with the subdirectories revolution, upgrade, and images. The names of the directory are case sensitive and must all be lower case. 3. Copy the desired firmware upgrade “.upg” file into the “\impinj\revolution\upgrade\images\” directory. If multiple “.upg” files exist in the images directory, the reader will use the file modified most recently. 4. Remove the USB drive from your computer.  Using the USB Drive 1. Confirm that the reader is ready for upgrade with both the Power and Status LEDs illuminated. 2. Insert the USB drive into the “USB Host” port on the reader. 3. Within 5-10 seconds, the reader will begin upgrading the reader and the Power LED will blink amber. If the Power LED remains solid green, the reader likely cannot locate the images directory and “.upg” file on the USB drive. 4. When the upgrade process completes (20-60 seconds), the Power LED will change to solid green. 5. Remove the USB drive from the “USB Host” port and reboot the reader.  During the upgrade process, the reader will attempt to append information to a “status.log” file in the “Impinj/revolution/upgrade” directory. The “status.log” file is intended to provide an audit trail for the upgrade of one or more readers. If the firmware upgrade process fails the Power LED will blink red. Remove the USB drive reboot the reader and check the “status.log” file for the reason of the failure. Upgrading the Firmware through the Impinj Management Web UI Speedway Revolution running Octane 4.4 and later supports upgrading the firmware using the Impinj Management Web UI.  1. Connect to the reader using a web browser http://<reader name or IP address>.  Examples: http://speedwayr-10-00-DD or http://10.0.10.44. 2. Log in to the reader; user name: root password: Impinj
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 4: Upgrading Firmware Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    25 3. Click the “Browse” button and select the firmware upgrade “.upg” file. 4. Click the “Upgrade” button.   Figure 4.1 Speedway Revolution Management Web Page   Figure 4.2 Close-up of Reader Upgrade and Reboot Section of Management Web Page
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 4: Upgrading Firmware  26    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. To fall back to the previous image 1. To revert to the pre-upgrade image, enter the following command from the Rshell prompt: config image fallback When the command completes successfully, the reader automatically reboots and returns to the login prompt. 2. Log in to the reader. The pre-upgrade image is now running.  Note: If there is no valid previous image, the response to the config image fallback command is Status=‘8, Permission-Denied’.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 5: Troubleshooting Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    27 Chapter 5: Troubleshooting If you experience a problem with Speedway Revolution, this brief chapter presents a few suggestions to correct the issue. Returning to the Factory Default Configuration If you are experiencing a problem with the reader and are having difficulty pinpointing the cause, it is useful to return the reader to a known state. We recommend resetting to the factory default configuration. Then try your reader again. ! Important: Factory Default Configuration Restore returns the reader configuration to its default state. It leaves any custom applications installed in the CAP intact. To restore the reader to its default state and remove any CAP contents, use Factory Default Restore. See the Warning on page 28. There are two ways to return Speedway Revolution to its factory default configuration: issuing an Rshell command or pushing the Factory Default Reset (FDR) button on the device. To use Rshell to return the reader to its factory default configuration and leaving CAP intact: 1. At the Rshell prompt, enter the following command: config image default When the command completes successfully, the reader automatically reboots and returns to the login prompt. 2. Log in to the reader. The reader is now running with the factory default configuration. CAP applications are intact. To use the FDR button on the reader to restore to its factory default configuration: 1. Using an object with a sharp tip, a paper clip or probe, press and hold the FDR button on the back while the reader power is on.  2. Continue holding the FDR button. Wait for 3 seconds after the Power LED turns off.  3. Release the FDR button when the LED blinks red once. The reader will boot up normally in the factory default configuration.         Figure 5.1 Factory default reset button  Warning: Pressing the FDR button for longer than 3 seconds can cause a factory default restore to occur. The factory default restore removes the reader’s custom Factory Default Restore button Insert and hold sharp point here for 3 seconds. Release before 10 seconds.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 5: Troubleshooting  28    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. application partition (CAP) if one exists. The reader returns to the original, factory shipped state. It is important to avoid accidentally removing the CAP. There may be situations where CAP removal is necessary.   The following table lists the factory default configuration values: Table 5.1: Factory Default Configuration Values Parameter Default Value User root Password impinj Upgrade Retrieve Mode Manual Logging No syslog servers Management Logging Level Error RFID Logging Level Error System Logging Level Error Network Mode Dynamic (DHCP) DHCP Send Hostname On Hostname speedway-xx-xx-xx (where xx-xx-xx are the last three digits of the MAC address) Static DNS Servers None Static NTP Servers None LLRP Inbound Port 5084 LLRP Inbound Service Enabled LLRP Outbound Service Enabled LLRP Outbound Servers None LLRP Outbound Retry Secs 5 LLRP Outbound Timeout Secs 2
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Chapter 5: Troubleshooting Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    29 Submitting Diagnostic Data for Analysis by Impinj Technical Support If Speedway Revolution is exhibiting RF behavior differing from what you expect and you are unable to determine the cause, you may want to submit relevant data for analysis by Impinj Technical Support. Using the Impinj MultiReader application, you can easily capture data relating to the problem scenario. By creating and providing a Reader Diagnostic Data file, Impinj’s Technical Support team can troubleshoot your issue. To capture data to a Reader Diagnostic Data file: 1. Open MultiReader and connect to the appropriate Speedway Revolution reader. See page 15 for details. 2. Select Configure Settings to open the Reader Settings screen. 3. Verify that you are viewing the connection settings for Reader 1. If you are not, select Reader 1 in the menu on the left. 4. In Control Reader, select No.  This setting value tells MultiReader that you do not want the MultiReader configuration controlling the reader. Changing this value is important because you most likely want to capture data for a reader operation that is being controlled by your application.  If, however, you want to capture an RF scenario that is controlled by MultiReader, set Control Reader to Yes. 5. In the menu on the left, select Data Capture. The following screen appears:  Figure 5.2 Reader Settings, Tag History & Debug Data Capture Reader 1 is already populated with the IP address. Login parameters are also populated. If these values are incorrect, change them here. You can capture data for up to four readers simultaneously. In this example, we are capturing data one reader. 6. Confirm that Capture is set to On.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Chapter 5: Troubleshooting  30    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. 7. Select Apply.  MultiReader connects to the reader and begins “listening” for any RF activity. The reader captures data surrounding any RF activity it detects. 8. Perform the RF activity to submit for analysis. 9. Select File in the upper left corner of the application. This completes the capture activity.  10. Select Save Debug Data.... A browse window opens. 11. Enter a file name and save the file in the desired location. 12. Send the .rdd file containing binary data to Impinj Technical Support.  Visit the Impinj support Web site, support.impinj.com., for submission details or talk with your Impinj representative.    Note: Another option is to create a network trace using Wireshark, a free protocol analyzer download from the Internet.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix A: Region Specific Information  Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    31 Appendix A: Information Specific to Regions of Operation Speedway Revolution is designed to work in various regulatory regions. This appendix contains frequency ranges and antenna requirements specific to each supported region.  ! Important: Each reader is locked to operate at region-specific frequencies only allowed by your local country regulations. Find your region-specific frequencies in this appendix. Operation in North America Frequency Plan The FCC specifies frequency hopping across the North American spectrum allocated to UHF RFID (902-928 MHz, with hopping occurring between 902.75-927.25 MHz in 500 KHz steps). The frequency plan is further explained in the table below: Table A.1: Frequency Plan for North America Transmit Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 902.75 2 903.25 3 903.75 4 904.25 … … 49 926.75 50 927.25  Antenna Requirements Positioning Position the antenna’s surface at least 25 centimeters away from personnel working in the area. This is an FCC positioning requirement. For more details, see the following FCC bulletins: • FCC OET Bulletin 65: Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields • FCC OET Bulletin 56: Questions and Answers about Biological Effects and Potential Hazards of Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields Installation Speedway Revolution is capable of up to +32.5 dBm conducted power on the housing RF connector and requires professional installation.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix A: Region Specific Information  32    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Power Speedway Revolution may only be operated with Impinj-approved antennas and can radiate no more than 36 dBm EIRP per FCC Part 15.247 regulations. The Speedway Revolution output power may be increased to provide the maximum allowable EIRP subject to a maximum conducted power allowance of 30 dBm at the antenna connector. The maximum allowable output power of the reader can be set to satisfy both the conductor and radiated maximum criteria. The expression for the maximum reader power setting is:  Maximum power setting (in dBM) = the Smaller of: (36 – Composite Antenna Gain (in dBM)) OR (30 + Cable Loss (in dBM), where the composite antenna gain comprises the maximum linear antenna gain in dBi minus any cable loss between the reader and antenna in dB. Approved antenna vendors, model numbers, and associated gain are listed in the next section.  Note: The composite antenna gain comprises the maximum linear antenna gain in dBi minus any cable loss between the reader and antenna in dB. Approved antenna vendors, model numbers, and associated gain are listed in the next section. Approved Antennas • Laird Technologies model number S9028PCL/R (left- or right-hand CP), with integrated 8 foot pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • Impinj model number IPJ-A0301-USA (Mini-Guardrail) with SMA female connector; -15 dBi gain • Impinj model number IPJ-A0310-USA (Threshold-T Antenna) with 12 inch integrated pigtail to BNC male connector, 6 dBi composite gain. • Impinj model number IPJ-A0400-USA, CSL CS-777-2 (Brickyard) with 7 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 2 dBi composite gain • Impinj model number IPJ-A0401-USA or IPJ-A0402-USA (both Guardwall) with 6 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • MA/COM MAAN-000246-FL1 integrated RFID floor-mounted stand (multiple configurations available, 2 or 4 antennas left-hand and right-hand CP) with 8 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • MA/COM MAAN-000246-WL1 integrated RFID wall-mounted stand (multiple configurations available, 2 antennas left-hand and right-hand CP) with 8 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • MTI MT-262006/TLH (left-hand CP) or MT-262006/TRH (right-hand CP) with RPTNC female connector (antennas available in IP54 or IP67 ratings); 6 dBi gain • MTI MT-262013/NLH (left-hand CP) or MT-262013/NRH (right-hand CP) with Ntype female connector (antennas available in IP54 or IP67 ratings); 4.5 dBi gain
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix A: Region Specific Information  Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    33 • MTI MT-262013/TLH (left-hand CP) or MT-262013/TRH (right-hand CP) with RPTNC female connector (antennas available in IP54 or IP67 ratings); 4.5 dBi gain • Sensormatic Electronics Corp. model number IDANT20TNA25 with 25 foot Belden 7806A RG-58 coaxial cable (0.1 dB per foot loss) to RP-TNC male connector; 5.5 dBi composite gain • Sensormatic Electronics Corp. model number IDANT10CNA25 with 25 foot Belden 7806A coaxial cable (0.1 dB per foot loss) to RP-TNC male connector; 3.5 dBi composite gain • Sensormatic Electronics Corp. model number IDANT10CNA25 with 6 foot Belden 7806A coaxial cable (0.1 dB per foot loss) to RP-TNC male connector; 5.4 dBi composite gain  Warning: The use of any antenna not listed above may damage the reader or adversely affect performance. Operation in European Union Frequency Plan For European operation, the Speedway Revolution readers support the frequency plan listed in Table A.2 and are compliant with the ratified ETSI EN 302 208 specification v.1.2.1. This specification states that no listen-before-talk is performed, the maximum continuous transmit time on a channel is four seconds, and the reader enforces the 100 ms off time before reusing the same channel. Table A.2: Frequency Plan for European Union Transmit Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 4 865.7 7 866.3 10 866.9 13 867.5  Antenna Requirements Power European regulations allow a maximum radiated power of 33 dBm ERP (Effective Radiated Power) for high power RFID systems. The maximum Speedway Revolution output power is determined by the following equation: Maximum power setting (in dBm) = 33 – Antenna Gain (in dBd) + Cable loss (in dB) For example, for an application with an antenna gain of 6 dBd and cable loss of 2 dB, the reader output power can be set no higher than 33-6+2 = 29 dBm. The maximum transmit power of Speedway Revolution is 31.5dBm measured at the RF antenna port.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix A: Region Specific Information  34    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.  Note: It is important to apply the antenna gain expressed in dBd (dB with respect to a dipole), which is equivalent to the isotropic antenna gain (in dBi) minus 2.15 dB. Additionally, the antenna gain used to set the output power must be the maximum linear gain of the applicable antenna. Approved antenna vendors, model numbers, and associated gain are listed in the next section. Approved Antennas • Laird Technologies Model Number S8658PCL/R (left- or right-hand CP) with integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 3.85 dBd gain • Impinj Model Number IPJ-A0400-EU1, CSL CS-777-1 (Brickyard) with 7 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 0 dBd composite gain • MTI MT-242032/NLH (left-hand CP) or MT-242032/NRH (right-hand CP) with Ntype female connector (antennas available in IP54 or IP67 ratings); 1.85 dBd gain • Sensormatic Electronics Corp. Model number IDANT10CEU25 (left-hand CP only) with 6 foot Belden 7806A coaxial cable (0.1 dB per foot loss) to RP-TNC male connector; 3.25 dBd composite gain  Warning: The use of any antenna not listed above may damage the reader or adversely affect performance.  Operation in Other Global Regions For operation and use in the Rest of the World (ROW), the IPJ-REV-R420-GX1 (GX1 stands for Global1) and IPJ-REV-R220-GX1 models are available. Please contact Impinj to learn which countries and regions are currently certified. Your local Value Added Reseller (VAR) will provide the GX1 reader to you with the country (region) of operation locked. Installation Because Speedway Revolution is capable of up to +32.5 dBm conducted power on the housing RF connector, professional installation is required. Operation in Israel, Malaysia, Singapore, and Vietnam Regulations in these countries allow a maximum radiated power of 33 dBm ERP (Effective Radiated Power) for high power RFID systems. The maximum Speedway Revolution output power is determined by the following equation:  Maximum power setting (in dBm) = 33 – Antenna Gain (in dBd) + Cable loss (in dB)  For example, for an application with an antenna gain of 6 dBd and cable loss of 2 dB, the reader output power can be set no higher than 33-6+2 = 29 dBm. The maximum transmit power of Speedway Revolution is 32.5dBm measured at the RF antenna port.    Note: It is important to apply the antenna gain expressed in dBd (dB with respect to a dipole), which is equivalent to the isotropic antenna gain (in dBi) minus 2.15 dB. The antenna gain used to set the output power must be the the maximum linear gain of the applicable antenna. Approved antenna vendors, model numbers, and associated gain are listed in the following section.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix A: Region Specific Information  Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    35 Operation in Australia, Brazil, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand, and Uruguay  Regulations in Australia, Brazil, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand, and Uruguay allow maximum radiated power of 36 dBm EIRP. The Speedway Revolution output power may be increased to provide the maximum allowable EIRP subject to a maximum conducted power allowance as well. The maximum conducted power at the antenna connector can be no more than 30 dBm. The maximum allowable output power of the reader can be set to satisfy both the conductor and radiated maximum criteria. The expression for the maximum reader power setting is:  Maximum power setting (in dBM) = the Smaller of: (36 – Composite Antenna Gain (in dBM)) OR (30 + Cable Loss (in dBM)),  where the composite antenna gain comprises the maximum linear antenna gain in dBi minus any cable loss between the reader and antenna in dB. Approved antenna vendors, model numbers, and associated gain are listed in the next section.  Approved Antennas • Laird Technologies model number S9028PCL/R (left- or right-hand CP), with integrated 8 foot pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • Impinj model number IPJ-A0301-USA (Mini-Guardrail) with SMA female connector; -15 dBi gain • Impinj model number IPJ-A0310-USA (Threshold-T Antenna) with 12 inch integrated pigtail to BNC male connector, 6 dBi composite gain. • Impinj model number IPJ-A0400-USA, CSL CS-777-2 (Brickyard) with 7 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 2 dBi composite gain • Impinj model number IPJ-A0401-USA or IPJ-A0402-USA (both Guardwall) with 6 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • MA/COM MAAN-000246-FL1 integrated RFID floor-mounted stand (multiple con- figurations available, 2 or 4 antennas left-hand and right-hand CP) with 8 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • MA/COM MAAN-000246-WL1 integrated RFID wall-mounted stand (multiple con- figurations available, 2 antennas left-hand and right-hand CP) with 8 foot integrated pigtail to RP-TNC male connector; 6 dBi composite gain • MTI MT-262006/TLH (left-hand CP) or MT-262006/TRH (right-hand CP) with RP- TNC female connector (antennas available in IP54 or IP67 ratings); 6 dBi gain • MTI MT-262013/NLH (left-hand CP) or MT-262013/NRH (right-hand CP) with N- type female connector (antennas available in IP54 or IP67 ratings); 4.5 dBi gain • MTI MT-262013/TLH (left-hand CP) or MT-262013/TRH (right-hand CP) with RP- TNC female connector (antennas available in IP54 or IP67 ratings); 4.5 dBi gain • Sensormatic Electronics Corp. model number IDANT20TNA25 with 25 foot Belden 7806A RG-58 coaxial cable (0.1 dB per foot loss) to RP-TNC male connector; 5.5 dBi composite gain
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix A: Region Specific Information  36    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. • Sensormatic Electronics Corp. model number IDANT10CNA25 with 25 foot Belden 7806A coaxial cable (0.1 dB per foot loss) to RP-TNC male connector; 3.5 dBi composite gain • Sensormatic Electronics Corp. model number IDANT10CNA25 with 6 foot Belden 7806A coaxial cable (0.1 dB per foot loss) to RP-TNC male connector; 5.4 dBi composite gain   Warning: The use of any antenna not listed above may damage the reader or adversely affect performance.  Frequency Plans The GX1 reader operates over a subset of the FCC North American spectrum (902–928 MHz, with specific frequency and channel usage dictated by regulations of each country. Frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) is used, with the exception of Israeli where only a single channel is available. The specific frequency plans by country are listed in the tables that follow.  Table A.3 Australia operating frequency band is 920 to 926MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 36 920.25 MHz 2 37 920.75 MHz 3 38 921.25 MHz 4 39 921.75 MHz 5 40 922.25 MHz 6 41 922.75 MHz 7 42 923.25 MHz 8 43 923.75 MHz  9 44 924.25 MHz 10 45 924.75 MHz 11 46 925.25 MHz 12 47 925.75 MHz  Table A.4 Brazil operating frequency band is 902-907.5 and 915-928Mhz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 1 902.750 2 2 903.250
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix A: Region Specific Information  Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    37 LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 3 3 903.750 4 4 904.250 5 5 904.750 6 6 905.250 7 7 905.750 8 8 906.250 9 9 906.750 10 10 907.250 11 26 915.250 12 27 915.750 13 28 916.250 14 29 916.750 15 30 917.250 16 31 917.750 17 32 918.250 18 33 918.750 19 34 919.250 20 35 919.750 21 36 920.250 22 37 920.750 23 38 921.250 24 39 921.750 25 40 922.250 26 41 922.750 27 42 923.250 28 43 923.750 29 44 924.250 30 45 924.750 31 46 925.250 32 47 925.750 33 48 926.250 34 49 926.750
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix A: Region Specific Information  38    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 35 50 927.250  Table A.5 Hong Kong operating frequency band is 920 to 925MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 36 920.25 MHz 2 37 920.75 MHz 3 38 921.25 MHz 4 39 921.75 MHz 5 40 922.25 MHz 6 41 922.75 MHz 7 42 923.25 MHz 8 43 923.75 MHz 9 44 924.25 MHz 10 45 924.75 MHz  Table A.6 Israel operating frequency band is 915 to 917MHz with 500kHz channel spacing with a single channel LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 28 916.25 MHz  Table A.7 Malaysia operating frequency band is 919 to 923MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 34 919.25 MHz 2 35 919.75 MHz 3 36 920.25 MHz 4 37 920.75 MHz 5 38 921.25 MHz 6 39 921.75 MHz 7 40 922.25 MHz 8 41 922.75 MHz
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix A: Region Specific Information  Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    39 Table A.8 Singapore operating frequency band is 920 to 925MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 36 920.25 MHz 2 37 920.75 MHz 3 38 921.25 MHz 4 39 921.75 MHz 5 40 922.25 MHz 6 41 922.75 MHz 7 42 923.25 MHz 8 43 923.75 MHz 9 44 924.25 MHz 10 45 924.75 MHz  Table A.9 Taiwan operating frequency band is 922 to 928MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 40 922.25 MHz 2 41 922.75 MHz 3 42 923.25 MHz 4 43 923.75 MHz 5 44 924.25 MHz 6 45 924.75 MHz 7 46 925.25 MHz 8 47 925.75 MHz 9 48 926.25 MHz 10 49 926.75 MHz 11 50 927.25 MHz 12 - 927.75 MHz
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix A: Region Specific Information  40    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Table A.10 Thailand operating frequency band is 920 to 925MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 36 920.25 MHz 2 37 920.75 MHz 3 38 921.25 MHz 4 39 921.75 MHz 5 40 922.25 MHz 6 41 922.75 MHz 7 42 923.25 MHz 8 43 923.75 MHz 9 44 924.25 MHz 10 45 924.75 MHz  Table A.11 Uruguay operating frequency band is 916 to 928MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 1 28 916.25 MHz 2 29 916.75 MHz 3 30 917.25 MHz 4 31 917.75 MHz 5 32 918.25 MHz 6 33 918.75 MHz 7 34 919.25 MHz 8 35 919.75 MHz 9 36 920.25 MHz 10 37 920.75 MHz 11 38 921.25 MHz 12 39 921.75 MHz 13 40 922.25 MHz 14 41 922.75 MHz 15 42 923.25 MHz
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix A: Region Specific Information  Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    41 LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz) 16 43 923.75 MHz 17 44 924.25 MHz 18 45 924.75 MHz 19 46 925.25 MHz 20 47 925.75 MHz 21 48 926.25 MHz 22 49 926.75 MHz 23 50 927.25 MHz  A.12 Vietnam operating frequency band is 920 to 925MHz with 500kHz channel spacing. LLRP Channel Number FCC Channel Number Center Frequency (MHz)  1 36 920.25 MHz 2 37 920.75 MHz 3 38 921.25 MHz 4 39 921.75 MHz 5 40 922.25 MHz 6 41 922.75 MHz 7 42 923.25 MHz 8 43 923.75 MHz 9 44 924.25 MHz 10 45 924.75 MHz
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix B: GPIO Details  42    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. Appendix B: GPIO Details Speedway Revolution includes a multipurpose I/O port that contains an RS-232 serial port, four opto-isolated inputs, four opto-isolated outputs, and a +5V supply. You access these features through a DE15 connector mounted on the side of the reader. The four opto-isolated inputs have a range of 0–30V. The reader treats an input of 0–0.8V as a logic 0, and an input of 3–30V as a logic 1. The reader has a per-input debounce interval that is configurable via LLRP. (See the document titled Octane LLRP for more information). This value dictates the minimum pulse width of an input. Impinj recommends that external devices guarantee a minimum pulse width of at least 100 milliseconds. The reader also provides four opto-isolated outputs. For the GPIO outputs to function, an external user supply must be connected between V+, and V-. The maximum voltage for this supply is 30V. When the user configures a selected GPIO output via LLRP to output logic 0, an isolated FET switch within the reader effectively shorts that output to V- with a current sink capability of up to 200mA. When the user configures a selected GPIO output to logic 1, the selected output is pulled to V+ through a 10K resistor. If GPIO isolation is not required, the reader provides a +5V supply and a ground pin on the DB-15 that can be connected to V+ and V-. Figure B.1 shows the detailed function of each pin of the GPIO DB-15 connector.  Figure B.1 DB-15 GPIO Port Functions   Note: As described above, both the input and output pins are opto-isolated.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    43  Tables B.1 and B.2 further explain the function of each pin. Table B1: DB-15 Connector Pin-Out Pin I/O Name I/O Function 1 +5V Supply  Reader supplied (not isolated) power source 2 RS-232 RX  For auxiliary serial port functions 3 RS-232  TX For auxiliary serial port functions 4 Processor Reset  Reserved for future use. . Do not connect this pin to any signal 5 V+ Power source for isolated outputs 6 V- Return for isolated inputs and outputs 7 Ground Reader (not isolated) return 8 User OUT 1  Isolated output 1 (active pull down to V-) 9 User OUT 2 Isolated output 1 (active pull down to V-) 10 User OUT 3  Isolated output 3 (active pull down to V-) 11 User OUT 4  Isolated output 4 (active pull down to V-) 12 User IN 1  Isolated input 1 14 User IN 3  Isolated input 3 15 User IN  4 Isolated input 4  Table B.2: GPIO Interface Electrical Specification Pin Parameter Description Min Max Unit Conditions +5V Supply IO Output current  200 mA  User IN 1-4 VIH HIGH level input  voltage 3 30 V  User IN 1-4 VIL LOW level input voltage 0 0.8 V  User IN 1-4 VLI Input current  5 mA 24V input User IN 1-4 VI Input voltage range 0 30 V No damage User Out 1-4 VOH Output high voltage  V+* V 10K pullup User Out 1-4 VOL Output low voltage  (V-) +0.5 V 100mA load User Out 1-4 VI Supply voltage range (V+ - V-)  30 V  *User-supplied voltage
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix B: GPIO Details  44    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    45 Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation This section covers three unique aspects of using the xPortal product • RF Beam Pattern • Mounting the xPortal assembly • Attaching cables via Conduit RF Beam Pattern The Speedway xPortal has antenna beams that point upwards and downwards. This increases the total area covered by the portal. The unit is intended to be mounted at waist height on the wall. The lower beam covers the tag populations near the floor, while the upper beam reads tags at the top of tall pallets. Tags located at waist height are likely to be read by both beams.   Figure C.1 xPortal Simulated RF Beam Patterns!Mounting the xPortal !Referring to Figure C.3, the xPortal has many different mounting options:  1. Vesa mounts (http://www.vesa.org/) is a standard LCD screen / computer monitor mounting pattern. There are many off the shelf brackets, arms, and stands that use this hole pattern.  Shown in the red square on the figure.
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation  46    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc. • 8 total holes with M4 threads • Outer square pattern is 100mm on each side • Inner square pattern is 75 mm on each side • ¼-20 internally threaded studs  2. Common hardware using 1/4-20 hardware.  This hardware is typically employed in most T-slot extrusion designs (see http://www.8020.net/).  Show in the Green circles on the figure. 3. Keyhole slots and through-holes. Holes are sized to allow clearance for 1/4-20 screws. These holes allow you to mount the unit flush to a wall. Shown in the Blue ovals on the figure.  It is your responsibility to determine if the chosen screws can support the weight of the xPortal. Since the xPortal only weighs approximately 6.5 pounds (3kg), it can even be installed on drywall without needing to locate studs.  The Yellow circles on the figure highlight two knock-outs that can be removed if you wish to run cables into the unit directly from the wall. This provides a very clean installation, with no cables visible from the front.   FigureC.3 xPortal Mounting Hole Types and Locations
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    47 !!Conduit Attachment The round openings in the top and bottom of xPortal are designed so you can run metallic conduit directly to the unit. This allows Ethernet or power cables to be protected by standard EMT (electrical metallic tubing). The holes are sized for ½” trade size conduit connectors, or where metric conduit is used, 16mm trade size. Larger sizes of conduit (such as ¾”) can be used with the proper adapters, see example #3 below.  The following photos highlight the usage options.   Figure C.3 ½” conduit with a threaded nut flange connector!!
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation  48    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.  Figure C.4 Threaded ½” conduit connector!  Figure C.5 ½” conduit with a snap in flange connector!!!
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    49  Figure C.6 Snap in ½” conduit connector   Figure C.7 A squeeze connector for the larger ¾” conduit tubing size. The connector  has a nut and threads sized for the ½” conduit hole.!!
Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4 Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation  50    Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.  Figure C.8 ¾” conduit squeeze connector, with a threaded interface  to ½” conduit hole!
 Speedway Revolution Installation and Operations Guide Octane 4.4  Appendix C: Speedway xPortal Installation Copyright © 2010, Impinj, Inc.    51  Notices The information contained in this user guide is confidential and proprietary to Impinj, Inc. This document is conditionally issued, and neither receipt nor possession hereof confers or transfers any right in, or license to, use the subject matter of any drawings, design, or technical information contained herein, nor any right to reproduce or disclose any part of the contents hereof, without the prior written consent of Impinj and the authorized recipient hereof. Impinj reserves the right to change its products and services at any time without notice. Impinj assumes no responsibility for customer product design or for infringement of patents and/or the rights of third parties, which may result from assistance provided by Impinj. No representation of warranty is given and no liability is assumed by Impinj with respect to accuracy or use of such information. Impinj products are not designed for use in life support appliances, devices, or systems where malfunction can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury, death, property damage, or environmental damage.  Impinj, Inc. 701 N. 34th Street, Suite 300 Seattle, WA 98103 www.impinj.com

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