Either;
1. You have the wrong signal (captured),
2. Your wave file is flawed,
3. Your wave file structure is not compatible to your wave hardware (stereo/mono), or,
4. Your wave sending hardware/software is broken or inappropriate.
1. can be hard, if you have no other IR hardware/software, like IRWidget. Compare the decodes from the Ir Library (preferably by protocol/parameters, not CCF) with known coded for your TV; it may give you a clue.
For 2 (+1): if you upload your wave file I can have a look at it.
To 3, I asked about a description of your wave hardware, and you described your capturing hardware. That was not very helpful.
For 4: Play the wave file through normal speakers may give a clue, should sound like "bwwwt". Look at the IR diodes with a digital camera, should glow. Use an oscilloscope if you have one. Capture it again.
The most "hassle free" parameters are probably 48000Hz, 8bits, 2 channels, omitTail = false divide = false bigEndian=false (?) square=true(?).
Last edited by Barf on September 5, 2013 15:08.