Sujet : Re:Ir remotes
De : martin_riddle (at) *nospam* verison.net (Martin Rid)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 20. May 2024, 17:13:16
Autres entêtes
Organisation : news.eternal-september.org
Message-ID : <v2fsqt$2lbv$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : PiaoHong.Usenet.Client.Free:2.02
Don Y <
blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> Wrote in message:r
My understanding is that Ir remotes modulate an Ir "carrier" signalin a particular pattern to express a particular "code" corresponding tothe key pressed/held.And, that different "chipsets" use different carriers and encodings.Is there a front-end that is tuned to the particular carrierin the receiver? Or, is all of this done "digitally"?I.e., with a fast-enough (Ir) photodetector, should I be able todecode ANY signal from ANY "remote"?Said another way, is the fact that a particular device ONLYrecognizes a particular remote related to its use of a particularchipset (or, equivalently, decoding algorithm in software)?[The former would be hard to change but the latter should be relatively easy]
Yes, its modulated as others pointed out.
I think the Philips protocol is the most common. Played with
decoding a hauppauge remote years ago. I think there's a
preamble to set the timing for 1 and 0, then the data follows.
Pretty simple.
Cheers
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