Post 1 made on Tuesday December 30, 2014 at 08:02 |
dcolver Long Time Member |
Joined: Posts: | February 2003 22 |
|
|
Both of the universal remotes I have to hand decline to learn codes from two audio devices I have been trying recently.
The remotes are old: MX500 and Pronto.
The devices are new, current models of Mark Levinson and d'Agostino.
Have the coding standards used by remote controls changed recently such that old learning remotes may have difficulty learning them?
|
|
Post 2 made on Thursday January 8, 2015 at 23:35 |
Daniel Tonks Wrangler of Remotes |
Joined: Posts: | October 1998 28,785 |
|
|
It's possible those devices are using some abnormally high frequency (companies have done that in the past for no good reason - often high-end brands), although the Pronto in particular is a good learner (do make sure you're pointing at the right end - the learning eye is on the bottom, not the front).
Learning remotes don't necessarily have to know anything about what they're learning - they just capture the frequency and series of pulses that they see. The very first learning remote ever made in the mid 80's (GE Control Central) will still learn codes from a modern Blu-ray player using a code format that didn't even exist back then - so long as its frequency is in the ~40kHz "standard range".
|
|
Please read the following: Unsolicited commercial advertisements are absolutely not permitted on this forum. Other private buy & sell messages should be posted to our
Marketplace. For information on how to advertise your service or product
click here. Remote Central reserves the right to remove or modify any post that is deemed inappropriate.