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[Pierre] recently bought his first car and decided to make his own RFID electric starter for it! An Arduino Nano controls two relays which in turn can turn the car on, start it, and turn it off.
An Arduino, a spent roll of toilet paper, magnet wire, and a few passive components are what’s needed to build this RFID spoofer. It’s quick, dirty, and best of all, simple. However ...
I just received my RC522 RFID reader ... is the Arduino pin where we connect the button that is used the reset the alarm. The relay is connected to pin 7 and the active buzzer to pin 8. On the next ...
A cool RFID music table has been created using Arduino, iPod, and RFID tags to make it easy to change albums by simply changing the RFID tag. Each RFID tag has an individual code number relating ...
When you think of Arduino projects, your mind likely goes straight to RFID door locks ... short (and easily understandable) codes, or both. They're also perfect to do over the weekend and won ...