Introducing a New Idea in Remote Controls Remote Extender is a new product concept designed for today’s digital lifestyle households, where the traditional universal remote control can be extended to offer the convenience of controlling all the audio-visual equipment in the home, even when it is hidden from view. The UEI remote extender product converts any existing infrared (IR) remote to a radio frequency (RF) remote, allowing users to design their home entertainment around aesthetics rather than line-of-sight concerns with traditional infrared remotes. Remote Extender comes with a small RF transmitter and rechargeable battery that are inserted into any typical IR remote control by simply removing one of the standard batteries from the remote and replacing it with the transmitter and rechargeable battery. That remote can then send RF signals to a receiver that is placed near the equipment that you wish to control.
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The receiver uses IR blasters to then control the IR home theater equipment without being affected by IR interference issues or line-of-sight requirements. Remote Extender Receiver. IR Blaster Cable (1.5m, 2m and 3.5m in length). AAA' RF Transmitter Sleeve. 2 Rechargeable 2/3 Size 'AAA' Batteries.
AA' Battery Sleeve Converts your standard cable remote into an RF remote control. Control audio-visual equipment from anywhere – Allows subscribers to use your standard cable remote to control audio-visual equipment when it is located inside the cabinet, hidden from view, or even located in another room. Sends signals through doors, walls and even ceilings – Never have to point your remote at the audio-visual equipment again!. Unique selling proposition – Easy to install – as easy as replacing a battery in your existing remote control. User installs IR to RF transmitter in place of one of the remote batteries. Transmitter converts any IR command into an RF signal that can travel through walls and doors to a receiver located up to 100 feet away.
RF signal is received by a small AC-powered receiver, which is placed inside the AV equipment cabinet. RF to IR receiver converts RF signal back to IR and transmits to AV equipment, all in a fraction of a second! STEP 1: INSTALLING THE RF TRANSMITTER AND BATTERY Simply install the RF transmitter instead of one of the 'AAA' or 'AA' batteries inside your remote control. NOTE: You may have to change the position of the RF transmitter orientation to have better RF performance. STEP 2: SELECTING THE FREQUENCY Set the Selection Switch (on the back of the RECEIVER) to: A: 58KHz (Try this setting if your Scientific Atlanta Explorer or Amino STB is not responding) B: 38KHz (Default setting and most common setting for IR controlled devices) C: Sensitivity lower e.g.
Other equipment using 418 MHz (external interference). See section: 'Interference'. STEP 3: RECEIVER PLACEMENT Place the RECEIVER next to the corresponding device(s) you wish to control. STEP 4: CONNECTING THE IR BLASTER CABLE Connect the IR Blaster Cable into the back of the RECEIVER and place the IR Eye(s) on the receiving window (IR sensor) of each hidden device you want to control.
TIP: Shine a flashlight at the front of your device to help find the receiving IR sensor window NOTE: There are 3 IR Eyes to control 3 separate devices. NOTE: Remove the adhesive tape on the bottom of the IR Eye to secure it on the front of the audio/video equipment IR sensor. STEP 5: APPLYING POWER TO THE RECEIVER Plug the power adaptor in the wall socket and connect the DC connector to the back of the RECEIVER. The POWER LED on the top of the RECEIVER will illuminate. YOUR REMOTE CONTROL EXTENDER IS NOW READY FOR USE Problem: I cannot get the remote to control my device.
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Resolution: First, see if the remote will control the device if you point it at the device with no obstacles in the way. If you cannot control your device directly with the remote: Your batteries may be low Or the batteries may be inserted incorrectly Or the remote may be in the wrong control mode Or your remote may not be programmed to control that device. If you CAN control the device with the remote directly, but not with an obstacle in the way: Check to make sure that the IR blaster is secured onto the lens where the IR LED resides on the device. If that doesn't work, check the frequency setting on the back of the RF base station. Typically, the setting will need to be on B (38 kHz). However, some devices require the A setting (56kHz).
Make sure that the base station has power. When looking at the front of the base station, you should see a red LED lit up. If you don't see the red LED, there is not power to the unit. Try adjusting the antenna on the base station. Problem: I cannot find the IR LED on the front of the device that I wish to control.
Resolution: If you can't find the IR LED on your device, shine a flashlight at the front of your device to help locate the IR LED. That will help you to be able to see it through the dark plastic lens. Problem: The remote does not consistently control the TV when I press the buttons. Resolution: The batteries may be low. Try charging the 2/3 AAA battery in the receiver/charging base. If that doesn’t help, you may need to change your standard batteries in the remote.
For best performance, the RF transmitter sleeve should be oriented so that the positive (+) is pointing towards the front of the remote. If you remote control has a metal housing, that will have a negative effect on the performance of this product. Problem: My range seems to be decreasing over time. Resolution: The batteries may be low. Try charging the 2/3 AAA battery in the receiver/charging base.
If that doesn’t help, you may need to change your standard batteries in the remote. For best performance, the RF transmitter sleeve should be oriented so that the positive (+) is pointing towards the front of the remote.
Problem: I have multiple Remote Control Extenders in my home and one remote is controlling the devices in the both rooms. Resolution: There is a LOW SENSITIVITY setting on the back of the RF Base Station. When set to LOW SENSITIVITY, you will need to be fairly close to the unit in order to control your devices. This will eliminate the chance of a second remote controlling you devices when not desired.
When it comes to remotes, some of us here at EngadgetHD are partial to Logitech's Harmony models. The concept of 'activity based' remote configuration and automation is a good one; even though we Harmony, it's because we see potential, not because we're haters. Here's a criticism we have: issuing a laundry list of commands to switch activities is slow, and one thing users don't enjoy is maintaining a line of sight between the remote and the equipment rack while it issues all those commands.
RF is a solution, but it's only available at the top of the Harmony lineup. Enter the Next Generation Remote Control Extender.
It's a bit of kit that will 'RF-ize' your standard IR remote (not just Harmony remotes); and we're big fans of 'izing!' What's included The basic functional setup consists of an RF transceiver, a RF-to-IR base station and a rechargeable 2/3-AAA size battery.
Next Generation also supplies an extra 2/3-AAA battery, an AAA-to-AA battery conversion sleeve, a single-eye IR emitter and a wall wart power supply. First up is the RF transceiver module which you couple with one of the 2/3-AAA batteries, and then slap the combo inside your remote as a AA or AAA replacement.
It turns out that each IR command issued by your remote also produces a small amount of RF leakage that 'looks' just like the IR command. So the transceiver handles the task of sniffing out this wimpy RF signal and forwarding it to the base station, effectively making your IR remote into an RF remote. Our experience In our tests, the extender worked well.
We got about 50-feet of range with a wall between the base station and the remote, which was more than enough for our purposes. Most importantly for us, using the extender made it so the remote did not have to stay pointed at the equipment rack to work. Admittedly, this is a bit of a workaround solution, but it's a pretty elegant workaround at that. Even the detail of what to do when the rechargeable 2/3-AAA battery in your remote dies has been covered: two are included with the set, and the base station has a charger that you can leave one in, so you'll always have a charged one ready.
I'd like to control my COX cable box from another room, and thinking if Next Generation Remote Control Extender will do the job. I have HD Cox cable box in Family room, and I have HDMI spilliter comes out from box one going to Family room TV, and another going to home theater room.
I'd like to control the cable box to change the channel in home theater room. If I buy this Next Generation Remote Control Extender, can I do it?
Also, can I do it if I use same Cox cable remote just bring it from family room to use it in home theater or do I need to buy another universal remote to do it? Generally speaking, the NG remote extender will work with most remotes that don't have their own rechargeable battery packs. With that said, if it works with your Cox cable remote you'll be able to use the same remote from both locations if you choose to do so. If it doesn't work with Cox you might want to consider an inexpensive learning remote. I use the NG remote extender with my DirecTV HD DVR remote and also have a 2nd transmitter installed in a URC-8820 to control the DirecTV DVR from a 2nd remote location. I also control the same DVR via line of sight in the room where it's located with another remote. The NextGen extenders should work perfectly with the Cox cable boxes.
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It sounds like you want to be able to control the next Gen extender from both of the Cox remotes regardless of where they may be in the house. If that is correct then you will need the NextGen Extender Plus Kit plus an additional transmitter (for the second remote). Th kit and extra transmitter should all be the same frequency and 418 or 433 does not matter if you are not worried about interference with other rf devices in the home (ie. Remote system or wireless weather station). My components have been banished from the room to a closet 25' away. Have read about the Nextgen unit but they always specify 'same brand' components. I have a compatible Harmony remote and want to control a Comcast DVR cable box, a receiver, PS3 and possible a Denon CD/DVD player as well as a line of sight Samsung plasma.
So I assume the remote still puts out an IR signal to control the TV but will the Extender with the 6 eye setup work for me? Do I need the extender plus or the 'genius'. Not clear to me what the genius does, adds another controller battery? Thanks for the info.
Not sure I follow what you are saying. Did somewhere I say I needed more than 6? I thought I might need 4 and I did not know if you needed the 'genius' to control more than 2 components, etc. The info on their site is fairly obscure. I was asking what would I need to get to control the 4 or so things I will be using. My major equipment is in storage when the home theater got voted out for a pool room. So the Extender plus will control multiple different units as long as they are different manufacturers?
I was under the impression I would need an 'eye' for each component to make sure it was able to be line of sight with each component. So an Extender plus with a three eye addition will allow me to control 3 + the native one with the unit? Will control the samsung directly with the IR. My concern was they keep specifying you can control 'same manufacturer' equipment and did not make sense that you could not control multiple units from different manufacturers. Thanks, and no need for the snarky edge. Not suggesting I am trying to control a rack of esoterics. Forgive the terse responses from my phone.
You don't need one eye per component. If any blaster(s) or the base itself are LOS with your devices, that's sufficient.
Each has the same effect as standing in front of you equipment with the remote. Creative placement of the base or a single blaster could control everything if you want. Forget about the 'same manufacturer' stuff. It doesn't apply to you unless you have several identical devices. Any Next Gen model, including the cheapest one will work fine on any number of devices of any mix. They make the Genius model for the special case of controlling identical devices independently. For example if you have 5 identical cable boxes in your rack and used a traditional remote extender (non-addressable), all would respond at once to the same signal, which is undesireable.
Genius lets you isolate each one and control it independently. All Next Gens can control any mix of devices just like your original remote can. Sorry to be back but have the Nextgen Extender with 3 eye (could not place unit where would get line of sight. Have the 433 unit in a Harmony 659.
The components work with direct line of sight, but nothing seems to be getting RF transmitted. Battery was fully charged. When I put the remote off line of sight with an IR lead right over the IR receiver area, or hold the base in front of it, nothing. It is the Comcast DCX3400. In user settings it says A/B disabled also IR blaster off.
Not clear how to change those settings or if that is the problem. Can you tell by looking at the Extender base if it is receiving a signal?
Have also tried the A or B setting in the extender base with no luck. Is it just the simple answer the transmitter in the kit is bad? Also, as I have kids and they lost the 'door' over the batteries in the remote, I have an extra battery taped across the back that holds everything in. Can't imagine how that would cause a proble but just in the interest of full disclosure. Appreciate your time in advance. Vin- Was going to try a different battery position until the cable universal did not work either.
I had heard that sometimes it can be sensitive to battery position. The problem is my receiver is in another thread! It is the dreaded Onkyo 606 that has known HDMI issues. Just got done finishing that repair myself and the sound has dropped out.
But I will check the remote as you suggest. Does anyone know the Comcast cable A/B question and is that a problem? They tell you to set the cable box to 'B', but how do you do that??? Thinks for the injection of orderly thought and common sense.
Will let you know. No answer from Nextgen, though as I think about it, I don't think they have EVER answered one of my email questions. Vin- Tried the Universal Cable remote, the Receiver remote. Everything works line of sight.
I put the other battery in and with the base set at B I was seeing flashing light on the base when I pressed the remote, so it was transmitting. Just did not do anything.
Thought maybe the 3 eye extetion was bad and held the base in front. Still nothing. So it seems to be transmitting but not affecting the units. Do they need to be on some special setting? I have heard instructions say to set them to B? What does that mean?
It makes no sense that this is not working. Nextgen was of course no help still. Not sure why they have never returned any emails or calls. Originally Posted by Jscopus Vin- Tried the Universal Cable remote, the Receiver remote. Everything works line of sight. I put the other battery in and with the base set at B I was seeing flashing light on the base when I pressed the remote, so it was transmitting. Just did not do anything.
Thought maybe the 3 eye extetion was bad and held the base in front. Still nothing.
So it seems to be transmitting but not affecting the units. Do they need to be on some special setting?
Next Generation Remote Extender Instructions
I have heard instructions say to set them to B? What does that mean? It makes no sense that this is not working.
Nextgen was of course no help still. Not sure why they have never returned any emails or calls. Jeff Jeff, I think there are three settings on the base, aren't there? I'm not home right now or I'd just look at mine but I seem to remember there being A-B-C settings but honestly, this thing has just always worked for me with my DirecTV DVRs, Roku box and IR controlled A/V switcher. I'm sure you would have already tried all 3 positions if there are in fact 3. Have you tried moving the base/emitter eyes a little furthur away from the IR sensor.too strong of a signal has been known to cause probems with some components.
Not sure what else to say, it sounds like it could be a faulty transmitter. You might also want to check out this thread, you may stumble upon the answer to your problem there Let us know if you get this resolved.good luck. Posted my Nextgen problem in a Remote Central 'Custom installers' forum, this is what I got. You, sir, have been had. The whole idea that you can turn an IR remote into a RF remote just by putting in magic batteries is silly.
BTW, if you are looking to invest in some real estate, I have a bridge in Brooklyn I'm will to sell you for an amazing price. My response to that. That is sort of a retarded response. There are thousands of people that are currently using this without a problem. It is discussed regularly in the AVS Forum where people actually know what they are talking about. It clearly produces an RF signal and 95% of people using it have no problem. But there are certain units that don't respond well.
I suggest you keep the bridge in Brooklyn in the family. That really reaffirms my belief that most people that give you directions when you stop and ask, have less idea than you do. That is how I justify not asking. Back with more frustrating info. Still cant get the Nextgen to work. Curiously it sometimes will work for one command, change channel up or down by one, than no longer responds. Using the Moto DCX3400 and the Nextgen clearly is receiving the ir signal.
Tried it on my Onkyo 606 receiver (back from the dead) and it is odd. Program the code in and will turn off but not channels. Use alt code and does power off (but not on???) and channels. But still no luck with cable box using IR. So took a 3.5 mm input in the ext ir on the back of the box, that people claim works, and still nothimg. Have the 433hz nextgen which i saw somewhere was needed for the Comcast box. Especially pissing me off now as just had second knee surgery and have to hobble over to this mofo every time i want to change the channel.
Nextgen continues to be a remarkable POS company as they NEVER answer the phone for cust service and NEVER answer emails. Anybody out there to end my anguish? Sorry to resurrect an older thread, but I'm hoping you guys can help me determine whether what I'm about to try is a good idea. I am a big fan of Harmony remotes, and have 3 of them in my house (One in the bedroom, 700 in the living room, 550 in the basement). I have Hot Link Pro setups for both the living room and basement (in both cases, components are located remotely from the display, on the same rack actually). In the living room, I have some line-of-sight problems - there is no place I can put the receiver 'eye' to get rock-solid performance without it being too visible.
In the basement, I don't have problems, but my wife sometimes doesn't have the patience to maintain line-of-sight during activity start-ups. Proposed solution: get a Next Generation remote extender (or two) to either replace or augment the Hot Link Pro setups.
Questions: 1. Is the Next Generation system compatible with the Harmony 550 and Harmony 700? Advantages and disadvantages of offshoring. I've done some searching online and seen indications that the answer is 'yes' for both, but I'd welcome confirmation from users on this forum.
Is the 'flying saucer' small enough to be easily hidden behind a TV on a low-profile wall mount? Not a deal-breaker if 'no', since my understanding is the range is good enough I might get by putting the saucer down on the equipment rack instead. I have two XBox 360s in my rack, which I would very much like to control independently. My concern is if I end up trying to use the Next Generation on both, will I be sending spurious commands to one or the other?
Any workarounds for this? I have partially answered my questions after more searching.
It looks like there is a PLUS model that will allow up to two 'like-branded' devices without conflicts (curious as to exactly how they achieve that, since it looks like it only ships with a single transmitter). It appears that the Remote Extender Plus along with an extra transmitter and probably a 3 or 6-emitter cable should do the trick, and may let me retire one of my Hot Link Pro setups. Anybody know more about the 'Plus'? I'm no longer worried about fitting the saucer behind TV; seems like it would make much more sense to put it on the equipment rack in the basement. I am still hoping for confirmation that the Next Generation works with Harmony 550 and 700 remotes.
Any users here care to comment? Originally Posted by tlniec I have partially answered my questions after more searching. It looks like there is a PLUS model that will allow up to two 'like-branded' devices without conflicts (curious as to exactly how they achieve that, since it looks like it only ships with a single transmitter). It appears that the Remote Extender Plus along with an extra transmitter and probably a 3 or 6-emitter cable should do the trick, and may let me retire one of my Hot Link Pro setups. Anybody know more about the 'Plus'? I'm no longer worried about fitting the saucer behind TV; seems like it would make much more sense to put it on the equipment rack in the basement.
I am still hoping for confirmation that the Next Generation works with Harmony 550 and 700 remotes. Any users here care to comment? The PLUS comes in two fequencies, 418MHz or 433MHz (as did the original NextGen) allowing you to independently control two 'like-branded' devices by using two setups, i.e., you need to buy two complete kits, one of each frequency. They also have the Genius model which is capable of controlling 5 'like-branded' devices.see my post here: As far as the Harmony remotes, I've used the NextGen with the 550 without issue but have never gotten it to work with the 650 whose design is similar to that of the 700 so I might be inclined to conclude it wouldn't work but like you I've also read posts that said it worked, for example. Thanks for the reply! I had posed the same question to nextgen via e-mail, and hadn't yet heard back from them.
I was really hoping there would be a way to control everything with one setup, but it's not a huge deal. My basement setup works well enough via IR that I could probably leave it alone. Or maybe I could get creative (e.g. Basement components other than XBox controlled via the nextgen, but the XBox stays controlled via hotlink - that would prevent me from getting rid of one of my hotlink setups, but I could live with that).
Now to find out if anyone else has experience using it with a Harmony 700 (can't really swap remotes between the two rooms, as the basement needs the 550's higher device capacity). I am having some issues with my next gen. It works basically as advertsed, except i now have the issue that the channel will periodically and randomly switch from whatever I am watching to either channel 8 or 1. And it happens even if I take the batteries out of the remote. If anyone has any thoughts vis a vis troubleshooting if they have had the same issue i am all ears. I did contact Next Gen and they did respond to me very promptly.
They said to move the units away from the cable box, cover the bulb, and move the eye further from the box as well. So far still have the issue, will contact them again tomorrow. Also got this from another forum. 'First, Try disconnecting the expander and just using the remote as it came with the box/TV. If it works fine than, it could be an issue with the expander. Reprogram the expander to see if the issue goes away.
IF THE ABOVE DOESN'T WORK: A customer without any expander had this issue with the channel 8 coming up at random, and when the TV turned on, it would show channel 0. If I remember correctly, they did a Google Search for their brand of remote and reprogrammed the remote for their equipment.
You might have to reprogram your remote. Make sure to select the right codes for your TV. If you can find the instructions for your remote, look to see that there is a setting to set the remote back to factory defaults. Than, after that is done, reprogram it for your TV and any optional equipment.
When you reprogram the remote, make sure that the on and off processes work for EACH piece of equipment as well as the volume control.' That was from a Time Warner forum I think. Too bad, because it works beautifully except for this glitch. Originally Posted by tlniec Thanks for the reply! I had posed the same question to nextgen via e-mail, and hadn't yet heard back from them.
I was really hoping there would be a way to control everything with one setup, but it's not a huge deal. My basement setup works well enough via IR that I could probably leave it alone. Or maybe I could get creative (e.g. Basement components other than XBox controlled via the nextgen, but the XBox stays controlled via hotlink - that would prevent me from getting rid of one of my hotlink setups, but I could live with that). Now to find out if anyone else has experience using it with a Harmony 700 (can't really swap remotes between the two rooms, as the basement needs the 550's higher device capacity).
So I've received and set up my NextGen Plus. So far, things are working out quite well. My basement system with the Harmony 550 is performing as well as it ever did with the straight-up IR extender system (but with the bonus of less line-of-sight sensitivity and slightly improved range). My upstairs setup with the Harmony 700 isn't quite as trouble-free. It works beautifully controlling a Blu-Ray player and an HDMI switch, but it isn't playing nice with my HTPC. Regarding the HTPC control problems, I did some troubleshooting and noticed that when I pop the NextGen transmitter into the cheap Rosewill remote that came with my USB IR Receiver, it controls the HTPC just fine.
That was a relief, as I was originally worried that my USB IR receiver or my IR emitters were going wonky. I think I have isolated it down to the remote's programming, which I changed at the same time as I installed the NextGen (I know, never a good idea to change too many things at once). Sorry if anyone's getting bored w/ my little monologue here. Stayed up late troubleshooting and finally came to the conclusion that, at least in my installation, the NextGen will not successfully extend Windows Media Center SE commands sent via a Harmony 550 or 700 remote.
As a result, I've had to change my living room rig back to using an XBox 360 as a media center extender (instead of using the HTPC directly). That also means I can't use it to run my basement rig (it has an XBox 360 as well, so I get spurious commands if the other room's remote is sending XBox 360 commands).
Wireless Ir To Rf Remote Extender
What's odd to me is, the 550 and 700 will control all my other equipment just fine via the NextGen. Taking the NextGen out of the loop, the Windows Media Center SE commands as sent by either the 550 or the 700 will successfully drive my HTPCs with a direct IR line of sight. Taking the Harmony remotes out of the loop, if I stick the transmitter in my cheap Rosewill WMC remotes, they will successfully drive my HTPCs via the NextGen (no IR line of sight). It seems to only be the 3-pronged combination of the Harmony remotes plus the NextGen plus the HTPC (I even verified this with my server, which also has a USB IR receiver and runs WMC). Not the end of the world, but a bit of a disappointment. If anyone out there actually has a Harmony driving a Windows Media Center PC via a NextGen, I'd like to hear about it. Maybe there is something I'm missing.
On another note, I've noticed one other funny behavior with my NextGen (433 MHz model). I have the 'flying saucer' level with and about 6 feet away from one of my XBox 360s, and whenever the XBox is running, the talkback LEDs on the NextGen (and on the IR extender that's hooked up to its emitter) light up like crazy. Makes me wonder what sort of radiated emissions the XBox has in that frequency region (I did find some EMI data on the XBox 360, but it started at 1GHz).
Remote Extender Plus Receiver Kit Extended Remote Control Freedom Use the NextGen Remote Extender Plus to add radio frequency signals to almost any infrared AA or AAA remote control for longer range. By using our patented radio frequency signaling system, you can control a component up to 100 feet away through walls, doors, windows, floors, and more. There's no need for a direct line-of-sight to your component's receiver, so you can feel free to hide bulky component boxes (DVD, stereo, cable, etc.) behind closed cabinets or closets. Imagine a clutter-free entertainment area while still having full access to all of your tucked away components. With the NextGen Remote Extender Plus, this is possible! Use it to de-clutter entertainment stands and create the home theater that you've always wanted. Easy, Plug & Play Set-Up This start-up kit includes everything you'll need to control a single component.
The secret is in the specially designed batteries made for your component's remote control. Simply swap out one of your component's remote control's batteries for the special RF Transmitter battery. It comes with 2 rechargeable 2/3 AAA batteries (which can be charged inside the receiver's base), 1 RF transmitter battery sleeve, 1 conversion sleeve to fit AA battery operated controllers, and 1 single Eye Infrared Emitter cable. The Plus receiver is designed as a 'plug and play' device, so all you need to do is install your RF Transmitter, plug in the unit, connect the Eye Infrared Emitter, and begin using. For Additional Components Each receiver unit has one Eye Infrared Emitter output that is capable of controlling up to 6 components (if used with the appropriate ).
For each additional component, you will need to upgrade your single Eye Infrared Emitter by purchasing either the (providing sensors for up to 3 components) or the (providing sensors for up to 6 components). You will also need an additional for each new remote control being added to your system. Available Frequencies (for adding units to multiple rooms/locations throughout your home or office) The Remote Extender Plus Receiver Kit is available in 2 different frequencies: a 433 MHz and a 418 MHz. The reason for having 2 frequencies offered is to allow you to have up to 2 Remote Extender Plus Receiver Kits (one 433 MHz and one 418 MHz) in a single home or office (within a 100-ft. Radius) without ever experiencing interference. The Remote Extender Plus Receiver Kit is ideal for homes wanting 1 or 2 remote extender units. Additional Units Now, if you wish to have more than 2 NextGen Remote Extenders, you may want to check out the.
The Genius uses one frequency (433 MHz) that can be split up into 6 sub-channels. This allows you to have up to 6 separate Genius receiver kits within a 100-ft. Radius of each other.
Please note that because the Genius receiver uses sub-channels of a 433 MHz frequency, you CANNOT use the Plus 433 MHz frequency model within the same 100-ft. Radius as the Genius (it will cause interference between units). The 418 MHz frequency model of the Plus, however, can be used in the same 100-ft. Radius as the Genius without interference.
This means that you can have up a total of up to 7 NextGen remote extender receiver kits (the Plus 418 MHz frequency unit and 6 Genius units) within a single 100-ft. For example, if you own a home or business with 7 rooms across a 100-ft. Radius, you would be able to install a remote extender receiver kit in every room without ever experiencing interference. Please Note: If you wish to control an XM radio, you will need the 418 MHz frequency. If you wish to use a Harmony remote, you will need the 433 MHz frequency. Have questions or need help deciding which unit is best for you? Give us a call at 1.727.834.9400 or send us a message at sales.
Our customer service & technical team will be happy to assist you! Average Customer Review: 5 of 5 Total Reviews: 15 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful: No problems ordering or with product November 7, 2017 Reviewer: Anonymous Person from Hollywood, FL United States Works as described. Was this review helpful to you?
Clave de producto de halo 2. 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful: Just what we needed! November 7, 2017 Reviewer: Kelton Wigington from Fort Mill, SC United States Our new build home was wired with the HDMI cable behind the wall for the TV to be mounted above the fireplace, and the 2nd HDMI port was inside a built in cabinet next to the fireplace. We had to put the cable box inside the cabinet and leave the door open in order to use the TV! Now with the remote extender plus, we can leave the cabinet closed and there are NO wires anywhere to be seen! It's like cool adult magic Was this review helpful to you? 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful: remote extender November 7, 2017 Reviewer: Robert McClintick from Belmont, NC United States Great experience ordering a replacement remote extender for one our new puppy chewed on. Easy transaction and fast shipping!
Thanks, Robert M Belmont, NC Was this review helpful to you? 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful: Remote extender plus November 7, 2017 Reviewer: Anonymous Person from tampa, FL United States Does exactly what I need, custom built in wall unit hides cable box and this device allows use of remote through the wall unit so I don't have to open the door. The 1st one lasted 7 years & I think I only needed a new battery but just bought the whole thing to have a spare.
Well worth the money spent. Was this review helpful to you? 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful: Good service November 7, 2017 Reviewer: russell aukerman from massillon, OH United States I am satisfied with time it took to receive the extender very happy with your company Was this review helpful to you?
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Creators of the Next Generation Remote Control Extender Since 2002, NextGen has been designing and manufacturing innovative, high-quality audio/video products such as the award-winning, patented Wireless Radio Frequency Remote Extender, which allows you to easily convert an existing infrared remote control into a remote with radio frequency capabilities. This allows the user to send signals to electronic devices without the 'line-of-site' requirements of a standard infrared remote control.
We also offer high performance HDMI connectors and cables suitable for a variety of applications, including your home theater system. NextGen takes pride in offering unique audio/video product solutions for both residential and commercial markets.
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