Global printing solutions company Lexmark International has released two models of UHF RFID-enabled color laser printers designed to enable customers to quickly encode and print RFID labels. The system addresses a growing need for affordable and convenient RFID label printing, says John Linton, Lexmark's retail and manufacturing industry director, which its customers have sought in recent years. The company not only sells its CS725R and CX725R color RFID printers, but also, upon request, partners with companies to provide solutions for end-to-end RFID systems.
Lexmark, headquartered in Lexington, Ky., manufactures laser printers and imaging products that are sold to customers worldwide. The company had previously offered a monochrome RFID-enabled laser printer with a built-in ThingMagic M5e reader (see Mojix Wins First-Ever 'Best in Show' Award at RFID Journal LIVE! 2008), but discontinued that model several years ago. However, Linton says, the use of RFID has become increasingly of interest to its customers in the past year or two, and those customers have begun asking about RFID label-printing options. "The demand has been really hot for these products," he states.
According to Linton, manufacturing companies are seeking RFID technology for monitoring work-in-progress (WIP); logistics companies are tracking inventory boxes, pallets and other items, as well as yard management; and some offices are utilizing RFID labels to track assets or documents. "Every customer is at least thinking about RFID on an enterprise level," he says. In addition, Lexmark has implemented its own RFID system to track its WIP for custom printer manufacturing, and uses the new color laser RFID printers to print labels for that purpose.
Businesses already using RFID often choose Lexmark printers for price labels, invoices or other documentation, Linton explains, and another printer for producing RFID tags. With the new color laser printers, the RFID functionality can be built into an existing document or label.
In the case of WIP, for instance, some Lexmark customers are applying RFID labels to parts or products being assembled, in order to track the manufacturing process and shipping, according to custom orders. Lexmark uses the tags attached to its own printers, as well as to the trays provided with those printers, in order to fulfill custom orders. Staff members can use a label's unique ID number, paired with the order details in the software, to help them confirm that the proper custom-made product is being provided to the correct customer.
In addition, logistics companies are printing tags and using them to monitor yard management. For instance, the tags are being utilized to identify trailers or containers within a yard via a mobile RFID reader.
One of the greatest drivers for RFID growth among Lexmark's customers, Linton says, may be the trend toward retail and apparel tagging. Since retailers and brands are increasingly using the technology, manufacturers and logistics providers are finding an advantage in applying tags themselves and using them internally. "All our data is showing that RFID is going through the roof," he states. "The early excitement we've seen has been pretty amazing."
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