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Post 2 made on Tuesday November 8, 2011 at 23:30
3FG
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August 2009
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It is very unlikley to be a TOAD. Here are the usual discretes for Onkyo Bluray players:

Power On NEC1-f16 210.31 function 0.153
0000 006c 0022 0002 0156 00ac 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0041 0020 066F 0156 0056 0020 0E54

Standby NEC1-f16 210.31 0.140
0000 006c 0022 0002 0156 00ac 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0041 0015 0041 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0016 0015 0041 0020 069A 0156 0056 0020 0E54

NEC!-f16 means a signal with NEC1 framing, but the the 3rd and 4th bytes are not binary complements of each other, as they would be with ordinary NEC1 signals.

You can decode this sort of IR signal using IRTool, IRScope, etc with the 2.43 version of DecodeIR.dll


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