![]() They are usually marked with “IR Emitter.” Unless you have a very fancy one, it shouldn’t matter which port you use. Plug the emitters into the appropriate ports of the control box.Use the one that makes the most sense to you. Many times you wil have the option of using an included wall wart power cable or a USB power solution. Place the control box in its location, and plug in the power.If your IR emitter won’t reach, you can normally use a 2.5mm or 3.5mm extender cable (depending on the cabling used by the IR remote repeater you bought). Do this for all the equipment you need to control. In most cases you will affix the emitter directly on top of the IR receiver in your gear with the integrated 2-way tape.It should show up as a little square (see picture above). If you can’t find them on a diagram, take a flashlight and shine it on the front of the peice of gear. In my experience they are marked with “IR” in your user manual. Find the IR receivers on your equipment.I’ll start from the equipment side, but feel free to do it as you see fit. In more complex installations, you might need more than one IR remote repeater in order to keep from having the signals crossed. But if you have multiples of the same device (amps, receivers, players), this can create problems. Take note: In almost all these installations, all the transmitters (sometimes called flashers) get all the IR commands. Its function is to receive the IR transmission from your remote and send it to the controller box. The controller box then takes that transmission and sends it out to the IR emitters that are affixed to your equipment. ![]() The IR receiver is the exact same one that is installed in all your equipment. An IR receiver, a control box, and a series of IR emitters. It consists, in its basic form, of 3 components. What’s left? Rip the doors off your cabinets? Stack your equipment in the middle of the room and run cables to your sources? Give up and go back to just TV speakers? Those are viable, and barbaric options….but have you considered installing an IR remote repeater?Īn IR remote repeater is very simple in operation. ![]() Next, you say “Get a Harmony Hub and remote!” Would if I could! Harmony is discontinued and the only hub-based remote that is being offered is the Sofabaton X1, and it is still collecting money on Kickstarter and not expected to be available until late 2021. Don’t worry, I’ll have a review of that soon after it comes out! So while we might eventually see Bluetooth as the standard, we aren’t there yet. Plus, most Bluetooth-enabled boxes still have an IR input as a backup! However, in my setup, my Denon receiver, LG OLED, and CD player are IR-based, while my streaming boxes are Bluetooth. I know what you will say! “Aren’t most remotes Bluetooth now?” You are correct, many are moving that way. What these all have in common is difficulty using traditional line-of-sight IR remote controls. That’s where installing an IR remote repeater can save the day. Some have the equipment in other locations within their room. Others have their equipment in a separate room. Some prefer to have their equipment hidden within cabinets. Not every AV enthusiast keeps their equipment in plain sight. ![]()
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