RFID replacement dossierUpdated: May 25, 2026

Zebra AN480Nyocha: Nkọwa na Nhọrọ

The Zebra AN480 is an industrial passive antenna element costing $200. Contrast its coaxial installation needs against Nextwaves integrated network panels.

Ndị Injinia NextwavesNyocha Ngwaike5 min gụọ

Technical verdict

Zebra AN480 is a mainstream hardware purchase, but it is not always the best architecture for direct RFID data integration.

Do not evaluate AN480 by list price alone. Its strongest fit is a project that already uses Type N Female, has time for RF tuning, and accepts extra middleware work. If the engineering team needs open APIs, realtime data, and faster edge-to-cloud deployment, Nextwaves NR155 is the stronger replacement path to evaluate.

Initial cost

$200 before deployment accessories

Published throughput

Not specified

Integration surface

Type N Female

Physical data

259 x 259 x 33 mm; 1.13 kg; IP: IP54

Published specs

Specifications to validate before replacing

Ugboro

Global (865-956 MHz)

Usoro

N/A (Passive Antenna Element)

Njiko

Type N Female

Ntụle IP

IP54

Akụkụ

259 x 259 x 33 mm

Ibu

1.13 kg

Ike ọkọnọ

N/A (Passive)

Ọnụego Ịgụ

N/A (Passive)

Ọnụahịa Atụmatụ

$200

Deployment review

Operational strengths and risks

This summary is based on public specifications and does not replace an on-site RF survey.

Fit score

3.5/5

Strengths

  • Type N Female gives network teams a familiar integration surface instead of local-only collection.
  • N/A (Passive) can reduce separate power drops when switch PoE budget is available.
  • The $200 hardware baseline is easier to budget than premium fixed-reader configurations.
  • Throughput should be measured with real tags and antennas.

Validate

  • Quoted hardware price is not installed system cost; include antennas, cables, mounts, power, software, and configuration work.
  • RF performance depends on tag material, antenna position, transmit power, reader orientation, and site interference.
  • IP54 must be checked against dust, humidity, temperature, and cleaning requirements.
  • Raw RFID reads still need duplicate filtering, business-event mapping, and ERP/WMS integration before operations can use them.

Deployment review

Buying decision matrix

Best fit

Fixed UHF RFID projects that already use Type N Female and have time for RF tuning.

Weak fit

Do not compare device price only; total cost depends on accessories, software, and integration.

Deployment risk

IP54, N/A (Passive), 259 x 259 x 33 mm, and 1.13 kg must match the site layout.

Software risk

Plan for middleware, SDK work, duplicate filtering, and business-event mapping.

Alternative architecture

Zebra AN480 vs Nextwaves

01

Nkọwa Hardware

Zebra AN480 bụ ngwaọrụ RFID nke ụlọ ọrụ. Ọ na-arụ ọrụ n'ime oke Global (865-956 MHz) ma na-akwado ụkpụrụ N/A (Passive Antenna Element), na-eme ka e jiri ya mee ihe n'ọtụtụ ngwa ngwa ngwa ngwa ụlọ ọrụ.

Site na IP rating nke IP54, ọ na-enye nchebe megide ọnọdụ gburugburu ebe obibi dị na ụlọ nkwakọba ihe ma ọ bụ ụlọ azụmaahịa. Onye na-agụ akwụkwọ na-eji N/A (Passive) maka arụmọrụ na-aga n'ihu, ebe ọnụego ịgụ ya kachasị elu na N/A (Passive).

02

Njikọ na Njikọ Netwọk

Na ntinye nke oge a, njikọ netwọk bụ ihe mgbochi kachasị mkpa. Ihe nlereanya a na-enye nhọrọ Type N Female maka ịnyefe data azụ na sistemụ etiti.

Otú ọ dị, nnukwu ihe mgbochi na ngwaike Zebra nketa bụ nnukwu ntụkwasị obi na SDKs nwe (dị ka LLRP) ma ọ bụ dị oké ọnụ ahịa nke atọ IoT middleware iji hazie data tagi raw ka ọ bụrụ ọgụgụ isi azụmahịa bara uru.

03

When to choose Nextwaves instead of another closed reader

Ọ bụrụ na ndị otu injinia gị na-enyocha Zebra AN480, Nextwaves NR155 na-enye ihe owuwu igwe ojii dị elu. Usoro nketa na-akpata nnukwu mmefu isi obodo site na mkpọchi onye na-ere ahịa na sistemụ ngwanrọ nke onwe.

Nextwaves na-ewepụ ihe mgbochi a kpamkpam site n'inye ọkọlọtọ MQTT REST API ozugbo na ngwaọrụ ahụ. Ndị mmepe ngwanrọ gị nwere ike itinye ịgụ akara ozugbo n'ime azụ ERP ma ọ bụ WMS omenala gị n'ime ụbọchị kama ọnwa, na-agafe kpamkpam ụgwọ ikike middleware na-eme ugboro ugboro.

Alternative architecture

Ngwa Igwegụ RFID UHF IoT a kapịrị ọnụ NR155

Cloud-native MQTT/REST APIs arụnyere. Ọ dịghị SDKs nwe, ọ dịghị ikike middleware. Jikọọ ozugbo na ERP ma ọ bụ WMS gị n'ime ụbọchị.

View Nextwaves NR155
Nextwaves NR155 Fixed IoT UHF RFID Reader

Ọdụ ụgbọ mmiri Antenna

4 x RP-TNC Ọdụ

Ọsọ Ịgụ

Ruo 400 tags/nke abụọ

Ike mmepụta

0–33 dBm (1dB nzọụkwụ)

Usoro Netwọk

MQTT / MQTTS

FAQ

Ajụjụ A Na-ajụkarị

These answers help purchasing and engineering teams review cost, integration, and deployment risk.

01

Gịnị bụ AN480?

The Zebra AN480 is a passive indoor/outdoor RFID antenna panel. Operating seamlessly across both EU and US Global (865-956 MHz) bands within a single footprint, it functions strictly to bounce UHF energy pushed from a standalone interrogator unit.

02

Ego ole ka nhazi a na-efu na mbụ?

Hardware modules start at $200. This price omits the fundamental components required for operation such as an active reader, massive low-loss RF cabling, heavy-duty swivel brackets, and enterprise integration licenses.

03

Gịnị mere m ga-eji họrọ Nextwaves kama?

Constructing portal systems using separate passive plates forces operators to balance coaxial cable lengths exactly. Nextwaves integrates high-power antennas directly onto an active reader board communicating over standard CAT6 PoE lines.

04

Ngwaike ahụ ọ siri ike zuru ezu maka ụlọ nkwakọba ihe?

Tipping the scales at 1.13 kg with a 259 x 259 x 33 mm square footprint, it boasts an IP54 enclosure rating. While robust against general manufacturing grit, it remains vulnerable to high-pressure wash-downs.

05

Ọ na-akwado ọtụtụ ụdị netwọkụ?

This is a primitive RF instrument and contains zero logic ports. Its sole connection is a heavily shielded Type N Female socket requiring thick LMR-240 or LMR-400 coaxial cabling trailing back to central readers.

06

Ndị otu m nwere ike ịwụnye nke a n'ime ụlọ?

Operations teams routinely mount this slab to factory ceiling trusses. Critical calibration hinges heavily upon aligning the antenna array pitch angles accurately and measuring RF attenuation bleeding across the thick coaxial wires.

07

Kedu ka njikwa dịpụrụ adịpụ si arụ ọrụ?

Functioning as a static metal element, it is entirely ignorant of software or firmware logic. Throughput relies 100% on the backend intelligence of the attached interrogator module.

08

Ọ dị m mkpa ngwanrọ nwe naanị iji mee ya?

You cannot route network signals into this device. Developers and network engineers instead interface entirely with the external proprietary reader hardware hooked to the Type N Female port.

09

Kedu akwụkwọ ikike na-abịa na ihe ọgụgụ?

Due to its simplistic nature, standard manufacturing defect protection covers it for a single year. Passive components typically perform reliably for decades barring extreme weather, vandalism, or severed coaxial leads.

10

A na-ere antenna iche iche?

Providing roughly 6.0 dBi Circularly polarized gain across a wide Global (865-956 MHz) sweeping bandwidth, it perfectly accommodates global deployments requiring a standardized installation footprint across varying RF locales.