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Flipperzero - one-Multi-Tool Device For Geeks

Flipperzero.one- Multi-Tool Device for Geeks

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Will Per
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75% found this document useful (4 votes)
1K views16 pages

Flipperzero - one-Multi-Tool Device For Geeks

Flipperzero.one- Multi-Tool Device for Geeks

Uploaded by

Will Per
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Multi-tool Device for Geeks

flipperzero.one

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Flipper Zero

Flipper Zero is a portable multi-tool for pentesters and geeks in a toy-like body. It loves
hacking digital stuff, such as radio protocols, access control systems, hardware and more.
It's fully open-source and customizable, so you can extend it in whatever way you like.

BUY NOW
Download Mobile Apps

What is Flipper Zero

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Your cyber buddy

The idea of Flipper Zero is to combine all the hardware tools you'd need for exploration and
development on the go. Flipper was inspired by pwnagotchi project, but unlike other DIY
boards, Flipper is designed with the convenience of everyday usage in mind — it has a
robust case, handy buttons, and shape, so there are no dirty PCBs or scratchy pins. Flipper
turns your projects into a game, reminding you that development should always be fun.

Flipper Zero is a tiny piece of hardware with a curious personality of a cyber-dolphin. It can
interact with digital systems in real life and grow while you use it. Explore any kind of access
control system, RFID, radio protocols, and debug hardware using GPIO pins.

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1.4" monochrome LCD display
128x64 px, ultra-low power

Sunlight readable

5-Button directional pad for menu navigation

Status LED

Exit/back button

Flipper Zero is completely autonomous and can be controlled from a 5-Position directional
pad without additional devices, such as computers or smartphones. Common scripts and
functions are available from the menu.

For more control, you can connect to Flipper via USB. Instead of a TFT/IPS/OLED, we
decided to build in a cool old-school LCD screen, which is perfectly visible in sunlight and
has an ultra-low power consumption of 400nA with the backlight turned off.

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GPIO pins
3.3V logic levels

(5V tolerant)

Infrared transceiver

Wrist strap hole

USB Type-C

Power and battery charging


Firmware update

MicroSD Card slot

Sub-1 GHz Transceiver

This is the operating range for a wide class of wireless devices and access control systems,
such as garage door remotes, boom barriers, IoT sensors and remote keyless systems.

Flipper has an integrated 433MHz antenna, and a CC1101 chip, which makes it a powerful
transceiver capable of up to 50 meters range.

Sub-1 GHz Range

Smart sockets & bulbs

IoT sensors & doorbells

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CC1101 is a universal transceiver designed for very low-power wireless applications. It
supports various types of digital modulations such as 2-FSK, 4-FSK, GFSK and MSK, as
well as OOK and flexible ASK shaping. You can perform any digital communication in your
applications such as connecting to IoT devices and access control systems.

Oh, and one more thing — Flipper uses 433 MHz to communicate with other Flippers out
there, so you can make some cyber-dolphin friends :)

TI CC1101 chip

Garage doors & barriers

Customizable radio platform

Sub-1 GHz antenna

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125kHz RFID

Low-frequency proximity cards

This type of card is widely used in old access control systems around the world. It's pretty
dumb, stores only an N-byte ID and has no authentication mechanism, allowing it to be read,
cloned and emulated by anyone. A 125 kHz antenna is located on the bottom of Flipper — it
can read EM-4100 and HID Prox cards, save them to memory to emulate later.

You can also emulate cards by entering their IDs manually.


Moreover, Flipper owners can exchange card IDs remotely.

NFC

High-frequency proximity cards

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Flipper Zero has a built-in NFC module (13.56 MHz). Along with the 125kHz module, it turns
Flipper into an ultimate RFID device operating in both Low Frequency (LF) and High
Frequency (HF) ranges. The NFC module supports all the major standards.

It works pretty much the same as the 125 kHz module, allowing you to interact with NFC-
enabled devices — read, write and emulate HF tags.

Bluetooth

Connect to apps

Flipper Zero has a built-in Bluetooth Low Energy module. As with other Flipper wireless
features, we will be providing an open source library for adding Flipper support to
community-made apps.

Full BLE support allows Flipper Zero to act as a peripheral device, allowing you to connect
your Flipper to 3rd-party devices and a smartphone.

Our mobile developers have designed official iOS and Android apps to let you unleash
Flipper's potential with a larger screen and greater control.

The infrared transmitter can transmit signals to control electronics such as TVs, air
conditioners, stereo systems and more.

Flipper has a built-in library of common TV vendor command sequences for power and
volume control. This library is constantly updated by Flipper community users uploading new
signals to Flipper’s IR Remote database.
Infrared Transmitter

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Flipper Zero also has an IR receiver that can receive signals and save them to the library, so
you can store any of your existing remotes to transmit commands later, and upload to the
public IR Remote database to share with other Flipper users.

Infrared learning feature

Infrared Transceiver

Infrared receiver

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MicroSD Card

There is lots of heavy data Flipper has to store: remotes codes, signal databases,
dictionaries, image assets, logs and more. All this data can be stored on an SD card, as well
as user plugins.

The SD slot will have a push-push type connector, so the card will be reliably secured inside
and won't stick out.

Flipper Zero will support any FAT32 formatted microSD card to store your assets so you’ll
never have to worry the memory will run out. The card is not required for Flipper Zero to
operate and is not included.
External storage for apps and data

Hand strap hole

Tool for Hardware Exploration

Hand strap hole

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Flipper Zero is a versatile tool for hardware exploration, firmware flashing, debugging, and
fuzzing. It can be connected to any piece of hardware using GPIO to control it with buttons,
run your own code and print debug messages to the LCD display. It can also be used as a
regular USB to UART/SPI/I2C/etc adapter.

SPI/UART/I2C to USB converter


Communicate with any hardware from your desktop application.

Firmware flashing tool

Flash any kind of SPI memory, such as EEPROM.

Fuzzing tool

Test any protocols and signals.

Built-in 5V and 3.3V power pins. Control from built-in buttons and display, no PC required.

Completely Autonomous

Flipper Zero has a built-in 1-Wire connector to read iButton (aka DS1990A, Touch Memory or
Dallas key) contact keys. This old technology is still widely used around the world. It uses the
1-Wire protocol that doesn't have any authentication. Flipper can easily read these keys,
store IDs to the memory, write IDs to blank keys and emulate the key itself.

Flipper Zero has a unique contact pad design on the corner — its shape works as a reader
and a probe to connect to iButton sockets at the same time. This mode is also handy for
silently intercepting the 1-Wire data line.
iButton

1-Wire

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1-Wire keys (Touch Memory)

What's inside

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Tech specs

MCU (Microcontroller unit)

Model: STM32WB55RG

MHz (application processor)
ARM Cortex-M4 32-bit 64
ARM Cortex-M0+ 32 MHz (network processor)

Flash: 1024 KB
SRAM: 256 KB

Display

LCD Monochrome
Resolution: 128x64
px

Controller: ST7565R
Interface: SPI

Diagonal Size:
1.4“

Sub-1 GHz module

Chip: TI CC1101
TX Power: 0 dBm
max

Frequency bands (depends on your region):

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● 315 MHz
● 433 MHz

● 868 MHz
● 915 MHz

Buzzer

Frequency: 100-2500 Hz
Sound Output: 87 dB

Type: Coin

Vibration Motor

Battery

LiPo 2000 mA⋅h


7 days approximately

Micro SD

Physical

Size: 100 x 40 x 25 mm

Weight: 102 grams


Body materials: PC,
ABS, PMMA
Operating temperature: 0 ~ 40 °C

GPIO

3.3 CMOS Level


Input 5V tolerant
Up to 20 mA per
digital pin

Bluetooth LE 5.0

TX Power: 0 dBm max


RX Sensitivity: -96 dBm


Data rate: 2 Mbps

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Infrared

TX/RX range: 800-950 nm


TX power: 300 mW

NFC

Frequency: 13.56 MHz


Supported cards:

● ISO-14443A/B

● NXP Mifare® Classic®, Ultralight®, DESFire® etc.


● FeliCa™

● NFC Forum protocols

Frequency: 125 kHz


Modulation: AM, PSK,
FSK

Supported cards:
● EM400x, EM410x,
EM420x
● HIDProx, Indala

RFID 125 kHz

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Force value: 30 N
Speed: 13500 rpm

Up to 64GB MicroSDHC
Read/Write speed: up to
5 Mbit/s

Control

5-button joystick
Back button

Reboot — Back+Left buttons for 2 seconds

USB

1x USB 2.0 port, type C


USB device

Charging

iButton 1-Wire

Operate modes: Reader/Writer/Emulator


Supported protocols:

● Dallas DS1990A

● CYFRAL

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GPIO Pinout

Full size image


Live 3D model

Follow Flipper's Progress

No spam, only important stuff

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