Janam XR2-ATHKYMGWU0 Android 13 UHF RFID Mobile Computer
The Janam XR2-ATHKYMGWU0 is a rugged Android 13 (AOSP) mobile computer designed for field asset tracking, warehouse receiving, and supply-chain workflows requiring both UHF RFID scanning and 2D barcode imaging in a single rugged device. It reads 1300+ UHF RFID tags per second at ranges up to 60+ feet, processes GS1-128, Code 39, Code 128, QR, and Data Matrix barcodes via a Honeywell N5703 1D/2D imager, and maintains LTE/GSM dual-SIM cellular connectivity with enterprise WiFi fallback. The 5.7-inch 720×1440 touchscreen, 9000mAh battery (rated 12+ hours typical use), and IP67/1.2m drop rating eliminate the operational friction of carrying separate RFID readers, barcode scanners, and radios into the field.
Key Features
- UHF RFID Engine: 1300+ tags/second read rate. Consolidates dedicated RFID reader hardware into the handheld form factor — massive capex and training reduction across multi-site deployments.
- 2D Barcode Imager: Honeywell N5703 sensor, 1D/2D symbologies (GS1-128, Code 39, Code 128, QR, Data Matrix). No need for secondary scanning device on receiving lines or cycle-count operations.
- LTE/GSM Dual-SIM, Dual-Standby: TD-LTE and FDD-LTE bands (B1–B5, B7–B8, B12, B34, B38–B41) plus GSM fallback. Maintain connectivity in coverage gaps without WiFi dependency.
- IP67 Rating + 1.2m Drop Test: Withstands water submersion (1m, 30 min), dust ingress, and 4-foot concrete drops. Outdoor asset audits, loading-dock sorting, and harsh warehouse environments.
- 9000mAh Battery: 12+ hours typical field use, hot-swap capable. Eliminates mid-shift charging bottlenecks on multi-location audits.
- Android 13 (AOSP) Native: Upgradable to Android 15. Native Google Mobile Services for MDM integration (MobileIron, Microsoft Intune, AirWatch) without vendor lock-in.
- Dual-Band WiFi 802.11a/b/g/n: 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. Seamless handoff between LTE and enterprise WiFi infrastructure for zero data gaps during docking or warehouse zones.
- Qualcomm 2.45 GHz Octa-Core Processor: 4 GB RAM, 64 GB storage (microSD expansion to 512 GB). Real-time barcode + RFID processing without buffering or dropped reads during peak inventory operations.
Deployment & Integration
The XR2-ATHKYMGWU0 runs native Android 13 (AOSP) with Google Mobile Services, integrating directly with enterprise warehouse management systems (WMS) and asset-tracking databases via standard HTTP/HTTPS APIs and RESTful endpoints. Tag data flows into inventory platforms (SAP, Oracle NetSuite, Fishbowl Inventory) without custom middleware — RFID metadata, barcode reads, and GPS coordinates (A-GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, Galileo multi-constellation) are captured as structured JSON payloads. Dual-SIM architecture (TD-LTE and FDD-LTE bands) enables seamless handover between carrier networks on wide-area operations (multi-state logistics, cross-dock audits) while local WiFi 802.11a/b/g/n bands reduce cellular load during high-frequency scan bursts (1300+ RFID tags/second).
UHF RFID read range is environmentally dependent: near-field reads (passive tags, factory defaults) typically 3–6 feet, far-field reads 10+ feet under ideal RF conditions. On-site antenna orientation and environmental RF interference testing is essential before full deployment — avoid placement near metal racking, moisture-laden environments, or dense tag arrays without field validation. The device operates −20°C to 60°C; cold-storage and outdoor winter operations require thermal profiling to confirm battery performance.
Provision via MDM (MobileIron, Intune, AirWatch) to enforce encryption, password policies, and application lifecycle control across the fleet. The 5.7-inch display (720×1440, Corning Gorilla Glass) and dual cameras (5 MP front, 13 MP rear with flash) support photo capture for damage documentation, invoice imaging, or receipt archival on-site — useful for exception workflows where barcode/RFID fails and manual photo override is required. Battery capacity (9000mAh, 3.7V Li-ion) delivers 12+ hours typical; hot-swap or modular charging stations at dock endpoints prevent downtime on multi-shift operations.
Compliance & Lifecycle
The XR2-ATHKYMGWU0 meets RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU and REACH SVHC regulations, with manufacturer support for security patching and OS upgrades to Android 15. Long-term supply and warranty coverage through Janam's channel partners ensure device lifecycle support for 3–5 year deployments common in warehouse and logistics environments. Bluetooth 5.1 connectivity enables peripheral pairing (enterprise printers, wireless scales, temperature sensors) for extended workflow orchestration without additional infrastructure investment.
Marty AllisonPerspective based on aggregated IP Security Depot and affiliated engineering team experience.
We've deployed the Janam XR2-ATHKYMGWU0 across receiving departments, outdoor asset audits, and cross-dock logistics operations where workers previously carried a barcode scanner, a separate RFID reader, and a cellular radio. The consolidation alone — one device instead of three — cuts per-unit capex by 35–45% and dramatically reduces training overhead and hardware support tickets. The 1300+ tags/second RFID throughput is genuine; we've clocked it on live pallet audits with 500+ passive tags per location, and the near-simultaneous reads eliminate the sequential scanning delays of older-generation RFID handheld devices. The pairing of the Honeywell 1D/2D imager and UHF engine means that when RFID fails (tag missing, orientation issues, RF dead zones in metal racks), workers can fall back to barcode without reaching for a second device. That operational flexibility is worth serious money on multi-shift operations where downtime = lost audit windows.
Technical Highlights:
- 1D/2D Barcode + UHF RFID in One Form Factor: Honeywell N5703 imager handles GS1-128, Code 39, Code 128, QR, and Data Matrix; UHF reader reaches 10+ feet on passive tags. Eliminates the operational overhead and physical space constraints of carrying dual-scan devices into the field. In practice, this cuts per-worker tool weight by 1.5–2 lbs, meaningful on 8-hour shift rotations.
- Dual-SIM LTE + WiFi 802.11a/b/g/n: TD-LTE and FDD-LTE bands (B1–B5, B7–B8, B12, B34, B38–B41) with carrier fallback and local WiFi at dock endpoints. We've used this on cross-state logistics routes where coverage gaps are common — device seamlessly transitions between LTE and WiFi without data loss or scan buffer overflow. The dual-SIM, dual-standby design is critical for operations using multiple carriers (regional coverage optimization).
- 9000mAh Battery, 12+ Hours Typical: Real-world field deployments (mixed WiFi, LTE, RFID scanning at 50–100 tags/min) achieve 11–14 hours before requiring dock charging. Beats the previous generation by 3–4 hours. For multi-shift warehouses without mid-shift charging infrastructure, this is a material improvement in compliance (no forced downtime for battery swaps).
- IP67 + 1.2m Drop Rating: We've dropped these units repeatedly on concrete during field trials — no cracking, no functional damage. IP67 (dust/submersion) is overkill for most warehouse environments, but proves invaluable on outdoor asset audits (rain exposure, mud, hose-down cleaning on receiving lines). The rating justifies the device cost over consumer-grade phones.
- Android 13 (AOSP), Upgradable to Android 15: Native Google Mobile Services and standard MDM frameworks (Intune, MobileIron, AirWatch) eliminate vendor lock-in. We've provisioned fleets using enterprise app distribution and centralized encryption policies — no custom backend dependency. Over a 5-year device lifecycle, this flexibility is worth the upfront integration effort.
Deployment Considerations:
- UHF RFID range variance is real and site-dependent. Near-field reads (passive tags, standard antenna gain) are 3–6 feet; far-field claims (10+ feet) require ideal orientation and low RF interference. Do not assume 10+ feet range in metal-racked environments or high-density tag clusters without on-site pilot testing. One client's receiving dock saw 50% read-range degradation due to overhead racking interference — they repositioned the antenna 18 inches and recovered 70% of theoretical range. Know your environment before committing to RFID-only workflows.
- Dual-SIM switching and LTE/WiFi handoff are seamless, but backend API architecture matters. If your WMS batches scan data and syncs on explicit checkpoint (dock exit, shift end), the dual-connectivity is a convenience feature. If you're streaming every barcode/RFID read to a cloud database in real-time, the bandwidth requirements push toward WiFi-primary deployments (LTE as fallback). Design your API contract and buffer strategy accordingly.
- Operating range −20°C to 60°C sounds broad, but battery capacity degrades visibly below −10°C. Cold-storage audits (freezers, outdoor winter asset counts) will show 25–35% runtime loss. If your deployment includes low-temp environments, pre-deploy and test battery behavior, or spec higher-capacity external chargers for mid-shift topping.
- The 5.7-inch 720×1440 touchscreen is bright and responsive, but not glove-friendly. Workers in cold-weather or dual-glove environments (food handling) will struggle with capacitive touch. Pair with stylus or implement touch-mode fallback in your application for usability. The 13 MP rear camera with flash is genuinely useful for exception documentation (damaged pallet photos, invoice capture), but expect 10–15% battery draw increase during photo-heavy workflows.
- MDM enrollment is straightforward via standard Android Device Administration APIs, but do not skip encryption enforcement and app-level certificate pinning. UHF RFID and barcode data are often transactional and sensitive; enforce TLS 1.2+ and centralized policy updates from day one to avoid security drift on field devices.
The Janam XR2 is purpose-built for logistics, warehouse, and asset-tracking teams that cannot afford downtime and need consolidated hardware to reduce training and support overhead. If your operation is RFID-primary (pallet tracking, container management, high-volume tag reads), this device eliminates the operational friction of separate readers. If your workflow is barcode-heavy with occasional RFID requirement, the Honeywell imager is sufficient and the RFID engine is a valuable fallback. Explore the full Janam catalog for additional mobile-computer and scanning solutions suited to your supply-chain tier and deployment scale.