HunterCat
HunterCatHunterCatHunterCat
$49.00
  • Detecting the quantity of magnetic stripe heads

  • has the same dimensions of a bank card

  • reading status with three different LEDs

  • user could proceed or not depending on the alert LEDs

  • PRODUCT OVERVIEW
  • How It Works
  • READING PROCESS

Hunter Cat works detecting the quantity of magnetic stripe heads inside the card reader. Giving the user information by LEDs on the same Hunter Cat board. The scan process is simple.


The user just have to insert and remove the Hunter Cat normally before inserting the bank card. The Hunter will take a second to process the information and giving the reading status with three different LEDs: Ok, Warning and Dangerous. With this information, the user could proceed or not depending on the alert LEDs.

Hardware 


 The Hunter Cat runs over a SAMD11 with a CR2032 3V battery. According to Atmel SAM D11 datasheet, SAM D11 is a series of low-power microcontrollers using the 32-bit ARM® Cortex®-M0+ processor, and ranging from 14- to 24-pins with 16KB Flash and 4KB of SRAM. The SAM D11 devices operate at a maximum frequency of 48MHz and reach 2.46 Coremark/MHz. 


 The Hunter Cat board design has the same dimensions of a bank card. The only difference is that the Hunter Cat board is a little bit longer. The position of the magstripe hunters are in the same position of a normal magnetic stripe. The design follows the most important physical characteristics of ISO 7810/7816 for positioning. The Hunter Cat has four small pieces of metal in the front side. Those will be useful to interact with the sensors at some ATMs that detect the chip metal as trigger to open the compartment to insert the card.


The position of the magstripe triggers and the pieces of metal in the front side of the board will not affect the ATM reader or magstripe reader functionality. The pieces of metal that act as chip trigger to trick the ATM sensor are NOT connected to any voltage or signal to avoid any issues internally. 


 Understanding the Hunter Cat and its LEDs 


 Hunter Cat works detecting the quantity of magnetic stripe heads inside the card reader. The scan process is simple. Before inserting the bank card, the user just has to insert and remove the Hunter Cat like it was a normal card. The Hunter Cat will take a second to process the information and giving the reading results with three LEDs on the same board: Ok, Warning or Dangerous. With this information, the user could proceed or not, depending on the alert LED. 


 When the user inserts the battery for the first time, the three LEDs on the board will flash together four times. This indicates that Hunter Cat is ready to interact with magstripe readers.If the Hunter Cat is not used in a lapse of 15 seconds, it will change from ready mode to sleep mode to save battery. When this transition occurs, the LEDs will flash separately one by one two times.


After the Hunter Cat is in sleep mode, the only way to wake it up is pressing the reset button or removing and inserting the battery. With this process, the Hunter Cat will be ready again to process more magstripe readings. 


 Note: If the user inserts and remove the Hunter Cat in a magstripe card reader, and the board does not flash any LED that means that none readers was detected at all.

After pressing the reset button or after inserting the battery, the LEDs will flash four times simultaneously, and the Hunter Cat will be ready to interact with magstripe readers. Inserting and removing the Hunter Cat is a normal process like using a normal card. This process takes less than a second to be completed. 


 The question is why the Hunter Cat has to be inserted and removed in a second or less? This will avoid that the ATM intersect the card and take it all the way into the ATM. Also as preventive mechanism, the Hunter Cat is longer in size that the normal card; adding that the battery holder could block this process as well. 


 Another important reason to insert and remove the Hunter Cat in less than a second is because the firmware calculates an average reading in one way and confirming on the way back. This gives a better and more accurate reading.