433.92MHz Devices
Any device that uses 433.92MHz ±0.5MHz and Amplitude Shift Keying or On/Off Keying is a potential candidate for direct control. Devices which use Frequency Shift Keying (FSK) cannot be controlled in this way.
X-10's Powermid uses 433.92MHz in Europe. Non-RF versions of the above remotes, as well as the iPronto, can send IR to the IR2RF half of the Powermid which will repeat it as 433.92MHz RF. This method also allows control of the above listed RF devices.
Bose Lifestyle uses 27.145MHz. It cannot be controlled by direct RF from any of the listed remotes.
418MHz Devices
| ATI Remote Wonder¹ | Crestron CNRFGWA-418 RF Gateway | Some Emerson ceiling fans |
| LG-Zenith LSS-3200 DSS Receiver | Lutron RadioRA² | RF Thermostat |
| RF Thermostat | Most IR extenders (e.g. Powermid) |
Any device that uses 418MHz ±0.5MHz and Amplitude Shift Keying or On/Off Keying is a potential candidate for direct control. Devices which use Frequency Shift Keying (FSK) cannot be controlled in this way.
RF transmitters sold in the USA are required to have an FCC ID number. This can be used to determine the RF frequency at the FCC Search web site.
Other programmable remotes (e.g. some from Home Theater Master) can also send RF. If they send 418MHz or 433.92MHz and can make use of CCF hex codes, they can be used in the same manner.
The CM15A, introduced by X-10 in late 2004, combines a two-way PLC interface with a 310MHz RF receiver and a 310MHz RF transmitter. The RF components are third party daughter boards. The RF receiver is a single chip type (HiMark RX3310A). The datasheet gives the L1 and C1 values for 418MHz. Converting the CM15A to respond to 418MHz is just a matter of replacing L1 and C1 (or perhaps of just tuning L1). However, it will then no longer respond to standard X-10 RF devices like Palmpads or motion sensors.
Non-RF models of the above programmable remotes can be modified to also send RF. The RF-modified remotes do not use a preamble. It may also be possible to build a converter/repeater (IR2RF) to communicate with a specific RF device. It depends on whether there are off-the-shelf RF transmitter modules for the RF frequency used by the device.
One potential glitch is that the Pronto/Marantz RF signal has a preamble which encodes the RF extender channel, ID and IR carrier frequency. This is a short series of short pulses/spaces with a 5mS gap before the real code. The oscilloscope screenshot below shows the digital output line of an RF receiver. Three copies of the preamble can be seen emerging out of the noise before the actual code starts. In most cases it will be ignored but the 33mS + 5mS gap preamble may confuse receivers that use a similar protocol. (The Pronto & Marantz RF Extenders strip the preamble and only repeat the code itself as IR.)


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