Best Security Products Shop in Bangladesh With Best Price
ZKTeco iClock9000-G (GPRS / 3G) Time Attendance Terminal || Hundure RAC-960PEF Fingerprint Time Attendance & Access Controller || Ahuja HBM-60CC Condenser, Cardioid Headband Microphone || Security Mirror || Parking Mirror || ZKTeco uFace800 Plus Face Detection Multi-Biometric T&A and A&C Terminal || Soft Tag (Swing) RF 8.2Mhz For EAS || TOA WM-5325 With WT-5810 UHF Wireless Microphone Sets
Yamaha MG10XU 10-Channel Mixing Console with Effects and USB
- 10-Channel Mixer
- Weight: 2.1 kg (4.63 lbs.
- 1 Stereo Bus
- 1 AUX (incl. FX)
- Metal chassis
Call for PriceYamaha MG10XU 10-Channel Mixing Console with Effects and USB
Call for PriceYamaha MG12XU 12-Channel Mixer console with USB and Effects
- 2 AUX (incl. FX)
- 12-Channel Mixing
- Weight: 4.2 kg (9.3 lbs.)
- Metal chassis
- SPX with 24 programs
Call for PriceYamaha MG12XU 12-Channel Mixer console with USB and Effects
Call for PriceYamaha MG16XU 16-channel Mixer console with USB and FX
- +48V phantom power
- XLR balanced outputs
- Metal chassis
- Weight: 6.8 kg (15.0 lbs.)
- 4 AUX (incl. FX)
Call for PriceYamaha MG16XU 16-channel Mixer console with USB and FX
Call for PriceYamaha MG20XU 20-channel Mixer console with USB and FX
- Metal chassis
- Weight: 7.1kg (15.7 lbs.)
- 4 AUX (incl. FX)
- 20-Channel Mixing
- 48V phantom power
Call for PriceYamaha MG20XU 20-channel Mixer console with USB and FX
Call for PriceYamaha CT120S 12 Channel Professional Mixing Console and Aux Paths Plus Effects Processor USB Player
- Model: CT120S-USB
- Color: Black
- Material: Metal
- Input: 100-240V AC 50/60Hz 0.23A
- Output:15V DC48V
- Item Size: Approx. 34.5x 52 x4cm / 13.6 x20.5 x1.6in
- Package Size: 56.9 x42.8 x10cm
৳ 18,500.00Hundure RAC-960PEF Fingerprint Time Attendance & Access Controller
- Brand: Hundure
- Model: RAC-960PEF
- Display: 128 x 64 Dot. Graphic Display with backlight.
- Fingerprint Capacity: 950 user capacity. ( 2 templates per user Finger)
- Card Capacity: 40,000 (max).
- Log Capacity: 100,000.
- Authentication Type: Fingerprint+Card+Password
- Communication Interface: Built-in RS-485 & TCP/IP
- Origin: Taiwan
- Warranty: One Year
More Hundure Fingerprint & Card Attendance Machine within your Budget:
৳ 26,500.00Avanix 6U Wall Mount Rack / Cabinet – 6U, 19″ (W600 x D450mm)
TOTEN Standard Wall Mount Rack / Cabinet / Enclosure – 6U, 19″ (W600 x D450 x H368mm) SWM6406.
Standard Scope of Supply
- 2 x 4-inch Fan (Low Noise) on Vented Top Flush Panel
- 2 x Side Door with Cam Lock
- Front Door – Tempered Glass with Cam Lock
- 4 x Panel Mount with Unit Indication
- 1 x Integrated Wall Mounting Panel
- 1 x Power Distribution Unit (6 Way PDU)
- 1 Packet of M6 Cage Nuts Assembly
- Finish with Epoxy Powder Coating
৳ 8,500.00Avanix 6U 6-Layer Wallmounted Data Cabinet 600x600x1ft W/ 1pcs Fan
Size: 600 mm (w) x 6U (H) x 600 mm (D)
Brand: TOTEN
Country of Origin: ChinaOthers Component:
* Front Door: Tempered Glass Door .* Removable Side Panels * 6 Point Power Socket * 2 nos. cooling Fan hidden on the top shelf * Powder coated color finished * Color: Black৳ 9,700.00Avanix 9U 600×450 Glass Door Wal Mount Rack with 1x 6port
- Brand: TOTEN
- Model: 9U Rack
- PDU: 1 x 6-Port PDU
- Size: 600mm x 450mm
- 2 x Side Door with Cam Lock
- 1 packet M6 cage nuts assembly
- Warranty: No Warranty
৳ 10,500.00Avanix 12U 600mm/450mm Wall Mounted Close Rack
- Brand: Avanix
- Size: 600 x 450
- PDU: 6 ports
- Lock: Round
- Fan: 2 Fans
- Glass Door
- Wall Mount Rack
৳ 14,500.00Avanix 12U 600mm/450mm Wall Mounted Close Rack
৳ 14,500.00Avanix 12 U Network Server Rack/Cabinet, 600mm X 600mm, Glass Door
Brand: Avanix
Model: W2.6612.9001
Size: 600mm x 12U X 600mm
Height: 2.1 ft৳ 15,000.00Avanix 15 U Network Server Rack/Cabinet, 600mm X 600mm, Glass Door
- Brand: TOTEN
- Model: 15U Rack
- 1 x 6 Port PDU AC
- 2 x Cooling Fans
- Front Glass Door
- Size: 600mm x 600mm
- Warranty: No Warranty
৳ 17,000.00
Epowsens
Established in 2005, Epowsens, a leading enterprise focuses on RF/AM soft label, RF/AM hard tag, RFID inlay/label, EAS/RFID system, etc. With over 10 years of experience, hundreds of employees and 1.2 billion pieces of annual production quantity, our products has cover a large share of the worldwide market. Our company’s amount of annual exports is 5-7 millions USD.
The core of our service is responsibility. We keep it as our culture, making our industry protects the retailers in the world.
EAS (Electronic Article Surveillance)–A security system for preventing theft in retail stores that uses disposable RF /AM label or reusable RF/AM hard tags attached to the merchandise. An alarm is triggered when walking through detection antenna gate at the store exit if a disposable tag was not deactivated or a reusable tag was not removed at the checkout counter.
UHF Inlay HF Inlay RFID UHF label RFID HF Label RFID Tag
RF Label Hard Tag Bottle Tag Ink Tag Detacher Am Label Deactivtor Eas System Safer Pin Lanyard Alarm Tag
How EAS Systems Working?
How Anti-shoplifting Devices Work? How EAS devices can detect security tags and security labels?
The most effective anti-shoplifting tools these days are tag-and-alarm systems, better known as electronic article surveillance (EAS) systems. Separately, these are good options. Used together, experts say, they’re almost unbeatable. EAS is a technology used to identify articles as they pass through a gated area in a store. This identification is used to alert someone that unauthorized removal of items is being attempted. According to the Association of Automated Identification Manufacturers, over 800,000 EAS systems have been installed worldwide, primarily in the retail arena. EAS systems are useful anywhere there is an opportunity for theft of items of any size. Using an EAS system enables the retailer to display popular items on the floor, where they can be seen, rather than putting them in locked cases or behind the counter.
New EAS technologies are being produced — not only to reduce shoplifting — but also to help increase sales, lower labor costs, speed inventory, improve stockroom logistics and, one day, to replace inventory record-keeping. But for now, we’ll stick to the role of EAS in battling shoplifting in your imaginary store!
Three types of EAS systems dominate the retail industry. In each case, an EAS tag or label is attached to an item. The tag is then deactivated, or taken from an active state where it will alarm an EAS system to an inactive state where it will not flag the alarm. If the tag is a hard, reusable tag, a detacher is used to remove it when a customer purchases the item it’s attached to. If it’s a disposable, paper tag, it can be deactivated by swiping it over a pad or with a handheld scanner that “tells” the tag it’s been authorized to leave the store. If the item has not been deactivated or detached by the clerk, when it is carried through the gates, an alarm will sound.
The use of EAS systems does not completely eliminate shoplifting. However, experts say, theft can be reduced by 60 percent or more when a reliable system is used. Even when a shoplifter manages to leave the store with a tagged item, the tag still must be removed — something that is no longer as easy as it once was. For example, some EAS tags contain special ink capsules, which will damage the stolen item when forcibly, and illegally, removed. (This type of device is known in the industry as benefit denial — we’ll discuss it more later!). Other popular EAS components today include source tagging, whereby an inexpensive label is integrated into the product or its packaging by the manufacturer.
The type of EAS system dictates how wide the exit/entrance aisle may be, and the physics of a particular EAS tag and technology determines which frequency range is used to create a surveillance area. EAS systems range from very low frequencies through the radio frequency range (see How Radio Scanners Work). These EAS systems operate on different principles, are not compatible and have specific benefits and disadvantages. (That’s why the Consumer Products Manufacturers Association, Inc. is encouraging a “tower-centric” EAS approach that can “read” multiple tag technologies rather than the “tag-centric” models that exist today.