Ripping up a Rothult
Rothult NFC locks were neat because they didn't cost a lot and had a reliable low-power NFC reader. I received a few as a gift with the intention that one would become fodder for a teardown. I had never documented a teardown but some pictures made sense if someone was going to replicate my work. I found someone else who had done a teardown with attention to reading data from a live unit and that was interesting and well documented, so I wanted to write an article about it.
You can find all my Hackaday articles on my Hackaday author page.
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This disclaimer must be intact and whole. This disclaimer must be included if a project is distributed.
All information on this blog, or linked by this blog, is not to be taken as advice or solicitation. Anyone attempting to replicate, in whole or in part, is responsible for the outcome and procedure. Any loss of functionality, money, property or similar, is the responsibility of those involved in the replication.
All digital communication regarding the email address 24hourengineer@gmail.com becomes the intellectual property of Brian McEvoy. Any information contained within these messages may be distributed or retained at the discretion of Brian McEvoy. Any email sent to this address, or any email account owned by Brian McEvoy, cannot be used to claim property or assets.
Comments to the blog may be utilized or erased at the discretion of the owner. No one posting may claim property or assets based on their post.
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Rothult NFC locks were neat because they didn't cost a lot and had a reliable low-power NFC reader. I received a few as a gift with the intention that one would become fodder for a teardown. I had never documented a teardown but some pictures made sense if someone was going to replicate my work. I found someone else who had done a teardown with attention to reading data from a live unit and that was interesting and well documented, so I wanted to write an article about it.
You can find all my Hackaday articles on my Hackaday author page.
First time here?
Completed projects from year 1
Completed projects from year 2
Completed projects from year 3
Completed projects from year 4
Completed projects from year 5
Completed projects from year 6
Disclaimer for http://24hourengineer.blogspot.com and 24HourEngineer.com
This disclaimer must be intact and whole. This disclaimer must be included if a project is distributed.
All information on this blog, or linked by this blog, is not to be taken as advice or solicitation. Anyone attempting to replicate, in whole or in part, is responsible for the outcome and procedure. Any loss of functionality, money, property or similar, is the responsibility of those involved in the replication.
All digital communication regarding the email address 24hourengineer@gmail.com becomes the intellectual property of Brian McEvoy. Any information contained within these messages may be distributed or retained at the discretion of Brian McEvoy. Any email sent to this address, or any email account owned by Brian McEvoy, cannot be used to claim property or assets.
Comments to the blog may be utilized or erased at the discretion of the owner. No one posting may claim property or assets based on their post.
This blog, including pictures and text, is copyright to Brian McEvoy.
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