RFID replacement dossierUpdated: May 25, 2026

ThingMagic (JADAK) M7e-PicoPagsusuri: Mga Espesipikasyon at Alternatibo

The ThingMagic M7e-Pico is a tiny $100 Impinj E310-based UHF module. Determine its engineering limits and software integration costs.

Engineering ng NextwavesPagsusuri ng Hardware5 min na pagbasa

Technical verdict

ThingMagic (JADAK) M7e-Pico is a mainstream hardware purchase, but it is not always the best architecture for direct RFID data integration.

Do not evaluate M7e-Pico by list price alone. Its strongest fit is a project that already uses UART Serial / I2C, 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

$100 before deployment accessories

Published throughput

50 tags/second

Integration surface

UART Serial / I2C

Physical data

18 x 21 x 3 mm; 3 g; IP: Bare PCB (None)

Published specs

Specifications to validate before replacing

Dalasan

Global (860-960 MHz)

Protokol

EPC Gen2v2, ISO 18000-63

Konektibidad

UART Serial / I2C

Xếp hạng IP

Bare PCB (None)

Dimensyon

18 x 21 x 3 mm

Timbang

3 g

Suplay ng Kuryente

3.3V to 5.25V DC

Bilis ng Pagbasa

up to ~50 tags/sec

Tinatayang Presyo

$100

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

  • UART Serial / I2C gives network teams a familiar integration surface instead of local-only collection.
  • 3.3V to 5.25V DC can reduce separate power drops when switch PoE budget is available.
  • The $100 hardware baseline is easier to budget than premium fixed-reader configurations.
  • 50 tags/second can fit faster inventory lanes when the read zone is tuned correctly.

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.
  • Bare PCB (None) 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 UART Serial / I2C and have time for RF tuning.

Weak fit

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

Deployment risk

Bare PCB (None), 3.3V to 5.25V DC, 18 x 21 x 3 mm, and 3 g must match the site layout.

Software risk

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

Alternative architecture

ThingMagic (JADAK) M7e-Pico vs Nextwaves

01

Pangkalahatang-ideya ng Hardware

Ang ThingMagic (JADAK) M7e-Pico ay isang industrial-grade na RFID device. Ito ay gumagana sa loob ng saklaw ng Global (860-960 MHz) at sumusuporta sa pamantayan ng EPC Gen2v2, ISO 18000-63, na nagiging malawakang ginagamit sa mga enterprise logistics na aplikasyon.

Sa IP rating na Bare PCB (None), ito ay nagbibigay ng proteksyon laban sa mga tiyak na kondisyon ng kapaligiran na karaniwan sa mga bodega o likod na bahagi ng retail. Ang mambabasa ay gumagamit ng 3.3V to 5.25V DC para sa tuloy-tuloy na pagganap, habang ang tinukoy na pinakamataas na bilis ng pagbasa ay umabot sa up to ~50 tags/sec.

02

Konektibidad at Integrasyon ng Network

Sa mga modernong deployment, ang integrasyon ng network ang pinakamalaking balakid. Ang modelong ito ay nag-aalok ng mga opsyon sa UART Serial / I2C para sa paglilipat ng data pabalik sa mga sentral na sistema.

Gayunpaman, isang malaking bottleneck sa legacy na hardware ng ThingMagic (JADAK) ay ang labis na pag-asa sa mga proprietary SDKs (tulad ng LLRP) o mamahaling third‑party IoT middleware upang iproseso ang raw tag data tungo sa makabuluhang business intelligence.

03

When to choose Nextwaves instead of another closed reader

Kung ang inyong engineering team ay sinusuri ang ThingMagic (JADAK) M7e-Pico, ang Nextwaves NR155 ay nag-aalok ng napaka-susunod na cloud-native na arkitektura. Ang mga legacy system ay likas na nagdudulot ng mataas na kapital na gastusin dahil sa vendor lock‑in at proprietary na ekosistema ng software.

Ganap na tinatanggal ng Nextwaves ang hadlang na ito sa pamamagitan ng pagbibigay ng standard na MQTT REST API direkta sa device. Ang inyong mga software developer ay maaaring i-integrate ang pagbasa ng mga tag direkta sa inyong custom na ERP o WMS backend sa loob ng ilang araw imbes na buwan, na ganap na iniiwasan ang paulit-ulit na bayad sa middleware licensing.

Alternative architecture

NR155 Fixed IoT UHF RFID Reader

Cloud-native na MQTT/REST APIs na naka‑built‑in. Walang proprietary SDKs, walang lisensya sa middleware. I-integrate nang direkta sa iyong ERP o WMS sa loob ng ilang araw.

View Nextwaves NR155
Nextwaves NR155 Fixed IoT UHF RFID Reader

Mga Port ng Antenna

4 cổng RP-TNC

Bilis ng Pagbasa

Hanggang 400 na tag bawat segundo

Lakas ng Output

0–33 dBm (1dB na hakbang)

Protocol ng Network

MQTT / MQTTS

FAQ

Mga Madalas Itanong

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

01

Ano ang M7e-Pico?

The ThingMagic (JADAK) M7e-Pico is a bare-board surface mount UHF RFID module built around the Impinj E310 reader chip. It parses EPC Gen2v2, ISO 18000-63 formatted tags across Global (860-960 MHz) bandwidths for embedding into medical devices or portable printers.

02

Magkano ang paunang gastos ng setup na ito?

A raw module starts at around $100 for small batches. This price explicitly excludes necessary engineering costs such as custom PCB carrier boards, soldering, secondary MCU processors, antennas, and housing enclosures required to make it functional.

03

Bakit ko pipiliin ang Nextwaves?

Buying raw modules shifts immense software and hardware development burdens onto your engineering teams. Nextwaves offers monolithic, fully integrated turnkey readers that plug directly into standard Ethernet ports out-of-the-box.

04

Matibay ba ang hardware para sa mga bodega?

As a bare SMD component, it weighs a sheer 3 g and measures just 18 x 21 x 3 mm. Lacking any chassis, it holds a Bare PCB (None) rating and will instantly fail if exposed to unmanaged static discharge or moisture.

05

Sinusuportahan ba nito ang maraming uri ng network?

The component interfaces strictly over raw UART Serial or I2C pinouts. It has no native IP networking, meaning all Ethernet, Wi-Fi, or Bluetooth tunneling must be added and secured by the parent device's host processor.

06

Maaari bang i-install ito ng aking team sa loob ng kumpanya?

Hardware engineers must solder the module to a custom motherboard, while software engineers deploy the ThingMagic Mercury API across the host MCU to initialize the radio and cycle its inventory logic.

07

Paano gumagana ang remote management?

Geared specifically toward power-constrained OEM embedding, it achieves a maximum read rate of up to ~50 tags/sec. It is suited for single-item identification or wearable tool tracking, not wholesale pallet sweeping.

08

Kailangan ko ba ng proprietary software para patakbuhin ito?

The host processor dictates entirely how parsed data reaches your cloud. You must build firmware bridging logic that converts local UART UART frames into IP packets sent to your enterprise database via Wi-Fi or LTE.

09

Anong warranty ang kasama ng reader?

JADAK provides standard component-level warranties against manufacturing faults. However, soldering temperatures or static shocks experienced during OEM integration frequently void these warranties if not strictly logged.

10

Hiwalay bang ibinebenta ang mga antenna?

Equipped with a single MMCX or U.FL edge connector to pair with a custom antenna element across the Global (860-960 MHz) block. The maximum transmit power peaks at +24 dBm.