Magnetic
stripe encoding terms:
Coercivity
A technical term used to designate how strong a magnetic field
must be to affect data encoded on a magnetic stripe. Coercivity
is measured in Oersteds (Oe). Coercivity is the measure of how
difficult it is to encode information in a magnetic stripe.
HiCo
Abbreviation for High Coercivity. HiCo magnetic stripes provide
the highest level of immunity to damage by stray magnetic
fields. They are more difficult to encode than LoCo magnetic
stripes because the encoding requires more power. HiCo magnetic
stripe cards are slightly more expensive for this reason.
LoCo
Abbreviation for Low Coercivity. Easier to encode and slightly
less expensive than HiCo magnetic stripe cards.
Selecting
which type of magnetic stripe to adopt depends on how the card
is to be used. Will the mag stripe be used daily, once a month,
or just a couple of times a year? The chart below shows some of
the applications where magnetic stripes are used and which
stripe is common for that application.
|
Applications
|
LoCo
|
HiCo
|
Usage
|
|
Access
Control
|
|
l
|
daily
|
|
Retail
Customer
Loyalty Cards
|
l
|
|
weekly
|
|
Membership
Cards
|
l
|
|
weekly/monthly
|
|
Time
and Attendance
|
|
l
|
daily
|
|
Debit/Credit
|
International
|
United
States
|
weekly/monthly
|
|
Drivers
License
|
|
l
|
Occasionally,
but HiCo required by most states.
|
The
easiest way to determine visually if a stripe on a card is HiCo
or LoCo is by the color. HiCo stripes are black and LoCo stripes
are a lighter brown. Magnetic stripe readers are
"blind" as to whether a stripe is HiCo or LoCo and are
designed to read both.
Another
term often used is Stripe-up and Stripe-down. Stripe-up means
the magnetic stripe is on the front of the card and Stripe-down
means the magnetic stripe is on the back of the card. This
information is important when ordering a printer since the
magnetic encoder must be installed differently for Stripe-up and
Stripe-down models at the factory. The most common is
Stripe-down.
All Zebra
Encoders follow the ISO standard for encoding, but can be
changed via the Microsoft Windows™
driver to enable proprietary encoding. Proprietary encoding
offers greater security and most readers can also be easily
reprogrammed to read custom encoding.