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The following page was printed from RemoteCentral.com:
IR Codes or Codsets PLEASE !!
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Topic: | IR Codes or Codsets PLEASE !! This thread has 14 replies. Displaying all posts. |
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Post 1 made on Friday April 8, 2005 at 10:06 |
craig162000 Lurking Member |
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Hi there, new to all this so be gentle with me ! I have recently purchased an RU950 and am after the Hexidecimal IR Codes or the the CODESETS for the following Sony products: (Remote control models in brackets) KLV-L32M1 (RMY1102) DVP-NS585P (RMD165P) STR-DB790 (RMPP412) TC-WE475 (RMJ920) VTX-D800U (RMX800) I have tried Sony Technical, but no help whatsoeva ! Please someone help me !! Craig
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Post 2 made on Friday April 8, 2005 at 10:25 |
johnsfine IR Expert |
Joined: Posts: | September 2002 5,159 |
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The best source for Sony IR data is [Link: hifi-remote.com]That data does not have model numbers, neither for the device nor for the remote. It is organised by device type and by the device numbers encoded in the signals (which you could find by decoding some sample learned signals). Model number isn't usually relevent in looking for Sony IR data because they have so many models almost all using the same code sets.
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Post 3 made on Friday April 8, 2005 at 10:46 |
TwistedMelon Long Time Member |
Joined: Posts: | December 2004 435 |
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These devices are likely (more than likely) supported using the code database built into the Pronto RU950. I believe the Pronto database is licenced from UEI and appears to be more than just a minimal set.
Just select device type, choose the Sony brand, and then pick the first available code set. Try it on your product. If it works, you're good. If it doesn't, go to the next code set for that device type (some type/brand combinations have 5 or more sets).
Bruno
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https://TwistedMelon.com - Mira & Manta IR - Remote Control Your Apps |
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Post 4 made on Friday April 8, 2005 at 12:05 |
richardstrudwick Long Time Member |
Joined: Posts: | September 2002 226 |
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I found the built in database useless for my Sony equipment
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Post 5 made on Friday April 8, 2005 at 16:24 |
jcl Advanced Member |
Joined: Posts: | January 2003 997 |
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On 04/08/05 10:06 ET, craig162000 said...
Hi there, new to all this so be gentle with me ! I have recently purchased an RU950 and am after the Hexidecimal IR Codes or the the CODESETS for the following Sony products: (Remote control models in brackets) KLV-L32M1 (RMY1102) DVP-NS585P (RMD165P) STR-DB790 (RMPP412) TC-WE475 (RMJ920) VTX-D800U (RMX800) I have tried Sony Technical, but no help whatsoeva ! Please someone help me !! Craig Why not just teach the pronto the codes? This is more desirable than the built in database.
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Jon Too many toys, too little time. |
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OP | Post 6 made on Sunday April 10, 2005 at 05:32 |
craig162000 Lurking Member |
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jcl, i have already been warned not to 'teach' the remote from the originals, as they have extra 'crap' at the end of the code. I am after the 'clean' remote codes or the codesets that the units work under. richardstrudwick, where did u get your codes from then ? Cheers TwistedMelon & johnsfine, ill have a play ! Craig
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Post 7 made on Sunday April 10, 2005 at 13:32 |
TwistedMelon Long Time Member |
Joined: Posts: | December 2004 435 |
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If you do have to resort to teaching, you can still get completely clean codes. It's going to be more work, but do the following...
Teach each command on to a dedicated and hidden panel. For each learn, copy the IR (select View IR first) and then paste it into the JP1 version of IRTool (available on the Yahoo JP1 group, not in RC's file section).
IRTool will use John Fine's DecodeIR and tell you the specific Protocol, Device # and Function #. Next use John's Makehex to generate new codes. You do this by editing the IRP file for the protocol you decoded in the first step. Modify the file to include the device code you want and then you can produce a batch of codes or single codes just by changing the range of function numbers at the top of the IRP.
Take the resulting Pronto Hex and paste pack into the buttons on your Pronto panel.
Bruno
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https://TwistedMelon.com - Mira & Manta IR - Remote Control Your Apps |
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Post 8 made on Sunday April 10, 2005 at 17:32 |
Peter Dewildt Loyal Member |
Joined: Posts: | July 2001 6,307 |
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Craig, just because you get codes from the Files area here does not mean that they are clean. These were all learnt by forum members and many are quite dirty.
If you want clean codes, the best way is to learn them yourself, and look at what you have learnt. The dirty codes are usually very obvious.
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Peter Pronto 1000 (retired), Pronto TSU7000, RFX6000 (retired) Pronto 2xTSU9600, RFX9400 |
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Post 9 made on Sunday April 10, 2005 at 20:38 |
mburwen Founding Member |
Joined: Posts: | August 2001 1,185 |
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jcl, i have already been warned not to 'teach' the remote from the originals, as they have extra 'crap' at the end of the code. I don't know who gave you that warning, but I'll bet that 9 out of 10 of the experts on this forum will advise you to learn the codes from the OEM remotes first, then fix the ones that prove to be problematic. I have about 200 codes in my setup and had to look for better ones in maybe 5 cases. Learning is fast, efficient and works most of the time.
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Post 10 made on Monday April 11, 2005 at 12:47 |
TwistedMelon Long Time Member |
Joined: Posts: | December 2004 435 |
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Generally OEM remotes don't transmit extra "crap" - it's poor learning that records or transposes "crap" for one reason or other (sunlight, poor aiming, other environmental factors, (bad) interpretation of the raw learned sequence, no interpretation (using a super-long or super-short raw sequence), etc...)
I can verify the Pronto TSU1000 does an excellent job at parsing a raw sequence. And I've been told (and can see through the number of posts in this forum) that NG Prontos (all of them) are simply terrible at this.
Bruno
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https://TwistedMelon.com - Mira & Manta IR - Remote Control Your Apps |
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Post 11 made on Monday April 11, 2005 at 17:42 |
jcl Advanced Member |
Joined: Posts: | January 2003 997 |
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I've had virtually no problems learning codes - and I do this for a living. Samsung has been the only problematic brands I have dealt with and even they can be learned. Sony is usually among the easiest.
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Jon Too many toys, too little time. |
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OP | Post 12 made on Tuesday April 12, 2005 at 03:52 |
craig162000 Lurking Member |
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Ok thanks people. Cheers for all the help ! Better get programming !!! Craig.
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Post 13 made on Tuesday April 12, 2005 at 03:54 |
Daniel Tonks Wrangler of Remotes |
Joined: Posts: | October 1998 28,781 |
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Now that Philips shows the hex code without requiring opening another window (and in a much smaller font that shows more at once), it's very easy to see if you have a clean or dirty code, ESPECIALLY for Sony equipment.
100% of the codes in my setup are learned (and are at least clean if not perfect) - and at this point that covers Sony, Philips, Hitachi, Samsung, Scientific Atlanta, Aiwa, Fisher, Denon and JVC.
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OP | Post 14 made on Wednesday April 13, 2005 at 05:08 |
craig162000 Lurking Member |
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How can i tell if they are clean or not ?
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Post 15 made on Wednesday April 13, 2005 at 05:29 |
Peter Dewildt Loyal Member |
Joined: Posts: | July 2001 6,307 |
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Just look at the codes. It becomes quite obvious when they are all dissimilar.
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Peter Pronto 1000 (retired), Pronto TSU7000, RFX6000 (retired) Pronto 2xTSU9600, RFX9400 |
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