On November 14, 2009 at 03:34, RTI Installer said...
Are you sure about that?
Here is some standard hex
0000 0073 0000 001A 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0040 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0040 0020 0CA5 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0040 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0040 0020 0497
Put it in the converter and click RC5
and you get this short hex which works with pronto
0000 0073 000D 0000 0020 0020 0040 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 09B7
Oh and look at this, here is an RC5 command
5000 0000 0000 0001 0000 00eF
Put it in the converter and oops we get this, stuff that usualy works just fine with RTI
0000 0073 0013 0000 0020 0020 0020 0020 0040 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 00A0 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 0020 09B7
the first set of Hex decodes as RC5 device 16 function 1.
the second set thru the converter decodes as RC5 device 0 function 0.
the shortform Hex looks like RC5 device 0 function 239.
the last set of Hex decodes as RC5x device 0 function 0.
the first three are RC5 codes, the last one is RC5x which incidentally if you put into a pronto compresses it to
5001 0000 0000 0002 0000 0000 0000 0000
none of them are NEC. Jason is correct when he says you cannot convert NEC to RC5.
Last edited by makitamark on November 14, 2009 04:54.