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Original thread:
Post 24 made on Thursday July 20, 2006 at 00:02
2nd rick
Super Member
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August 2002
4,521
On July 19, 2006 at 23:34, johnsfine said...
I followed that link. The description makes fairly
clear that the program generates only the IR protocol
used by Sharp and Denon.

To use that program you need to input the four
parts of a Sharp/Denon signal in binary with the
division of bits (5 bits, 6 bits, 2 bits and 2
bits) that Denon normally uses for documenting
their signals. If you use non binary characters
or the wrong number of bits, that program gives
no error message, it just produces garbage output
(not just not correct Sharp/Denon signals, but
something that isn't any kind of an IR signal
because it isn't structurally correct Pronto Hex).

A colleague sent me to that one... It probably worked on the last Denon or Sharp issue we had to deal with!!

Anyway, if you want anything other than creating
a Sharp/Denon signal from documentation in binary,
it's the wrong program.

I guess I didn't know that I was dealing with NEC until reading these threads...

On that note, is there a guide or thread somewhere on how to ID the raw IR data that these manufacturers publish so that we know which .irc to choose in your program??

BTW, sorry I was cranky and defensive earlier...
Discrete hunter isn't my regular arena here at RC, and you have been a lot of help.

Last time I crossed your path, you lit me up a little bit because I hadn't searched for the 48 bit Denon commands using the term "kaseiyko" or whatever obscure name that they gave it.

Ultimately, you helped me at that time as well.
Rick Murphy
Troy, MI


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