Months later, when none of the proposals for the 64-kilobyte chips needed for the tags fit into Boeing's aggressive timeline—it wanted complete 64-kilobyte tags by the fall of 2006—the airplane manufacturer said it would downgrade its tag memory requirements by a factor of eight, to 64 kilobits, a request Intelleflex indicated it could meet. A tag with 64 kilobits of memory or less, he notes, would suffice for parts or onboard equipment that do not generate long, detailed maintenance and report records and, therefore, do not require high-memory tags to hold that data. "You wouldn't need to put an Intelleflex [64-kilobit] chip on a fire extinguisher," Porad states. For such items, Boeing is considering tags with 512 bits of user memory—more than conventional Gen 2 tags used for supply chain applications, but considerably less than 64 kilobits.
On the other side of the spectrum, however, are aircraft parts with very long in-service histories, and for these Porad would still like to use tags with 64 kilobytes of memory. That's now a possibility. This week,
Fujitsu announced that it has developed a 64-kilobyte passive UHF tag, compliant with the EPC Gen 2 standard, that will become available later this year. Porad says Boeing knew Fujitsu has been developing the tag, and that it was nearing completion since Fujitsu has been communicating its progress to Boeing. Fujitsu reports that it has also been in discussions about the tag with other companies in the aviation industry, but declines to name them.
Unlike Intelleflex, Fujitsu is manufacturing both the chip and the full RFID inlay and housing. According to Porad, Intelleflex has contracted tag makers
Confidex and
Brady to convert its chips into full RFID inlays, as well as package those inlays into a rugged housing that complies with the
FAA-approved Aerospace Standard AS5678, passed by the
Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) late last year (see
Confidex Ready and Waiting for Boeing to Tag Silicon).
The Fujitsu chip uses FRAM memory technology, which has a faster data capture rate than EEPROM, the memory type used in the Intelleflex 64-kilobit chip. That, in addition to its higher memory capacity, will make the Fujitsu tag more attractive to Boeing, Porad says, though its price (not yet been announced, but which will most likely be higher than that of the 64-kilobit tags) and its weight (13.6 grams) could make it inappropriate for tagging some parts, depending on their quantity and sensitivity to weight.
Airbus, Boeing's top competitor, is actively utilizing RFID for tracking parts shipments and for tracking large plane components, but it has not yet initiated any program to attach tags to parts for lifecycle tracking. The firm told
RFID Journal, in the fall of 2007, that it has no immediate plans to ask suppliers to tag parts for the A380, the A350 or any of its legacy planes, claiming the technology is not yet mature enough for such an application (see
Airbus' Grand Plans for RFID). Nonetheless, it is working closely with suppliers to understand how in-service parts marking could be most successfully deployed. Airbus and Boeing have also collaborated on tag data standards (see
Boeing, Airbus Team on Standards).