Coby DVD938
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Here is one version of instructions to add an EEPROM to a 6131.
A parallel interface cable will work, provided you have a computer with a parallel port and an operating system that will let you access it. A USB to parallel adapter will not work.
USB interface cables for JP1 remotes are no longer available. Instead, you can use a flash JP1.2/1.3 cable and an adapter block that will translate the serial commands into the I2C format used by the EEPROMs. But if you're going to go that route, it would be far better to just get a JP1.3 remote, which uses the serial format natively. The adapter is roughly the same cost as a JP1.3 remote (e.g RCA RCRP05B). You can also build your own serial cable for JP1.2/1.3 remotes, if you have a computer with a serial port, or own a USB to serial adapter.
Comcast remotes are very cheap on eBay, and will work with a JP1.2/1,3 cable.
At least one Cablevison remote is made by UEI, and probably can be made to work.
A parallel interface cable will work, provided you have a computer with a parallel port and an operating system that will let you access it. A USB to parallel adapter will not work.
USB interface cables for JP1 remotes are no longer available. Instead, you can use a flash JP1.2/1.3 cable and an adapter block that will translate the serial commands into the I2C format used by the EEPROMs. But if you're going to go that route, it would be far better to just get a JP1.3 remote, which uses the serial format natively. The adapter is roughly the same cost as a JP1.3 remote (e.g RCA RCRP05B). You can also build your own serial cable for JP1.2/1.3 remotes, if you have a computer with a serial port, or own a USB to serial adapter.
Comcast remotes are very cheap on eBay, and will work with a JP1.2/1,3 cable.
At least one Cablevison remote is made by UEI, and probably can be made to work.
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vickyg2003
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I got into this hobby because of frugality.gmaslin wrote:3FG
I read the thread you linked in your post and believe I understand the inconvenience I'll have to accept using this remote. Since I am new to JP1, I'd like to proceed frugally so making use of what I have is desirable.
If you have an old computer with an LPT port, then a simple interface might be your most frugal entry point, provided your remotes have the EEPROM and Pins already added.
If you are buying eeproms and pins and a JP1.2/3 cable and a JP1 adapter, then you are not going the most frugal route.
A JP1.3 remote with a JP1.2/3 cable is probably the best buy in the long run. In general, the JP1 EEPPROM remotes have less user memory than the Flash remotes. So as you add new equipment, you'll need more and more upgrades, and you will soon hit bump into the size limit.
The 6131's have a special appeal. The old ones are really cute, and the 6131Ns have a very clean design, even if its hard to know which is the business end in the dark.
As much as I like my cute little 6131, I found that whenever I did a remote for someone else, and was offering that model as one of the ones to choose from, nobody ever chose it. It seems that the small closely packed buttons just frightened them away.
I hope you enjoy your new hobby. It is really fun.
Remember to provide feedback to let us know how the problem was solved and share your upgrades.
Tip: When creating an upgrade, always include ALL functions from the oem remote, even if you never plan on assigning them to a button. Complete function lists makes an upgrade more helpful to others.
Tip: When creating an upgrade, always include ALL functions from the oem remote, even if you never plan on assigning them to a button. Complete function lists makes an upgrade more helpful to others.
vickyg2003
A new modern remote will be ~$15 and as I understand it, I will still need a cable or some other method of communicating with it. I believe the 6131 has the EEPROM chip and pin interface. I will know better when I receive it. The cable cost me ~$5 so even if I need an EEPROM I will likely still be ahead. What would you budget for a functioning setup?
Whatever I do spend, I can recover by selling my old remotes
A new modern remote will be ~$15 and as I understand it, I will still need a cable or some other method of communicating with it. I believe the 6131 has the EEPROM chip and pin interface. I will know better when I receive it. The cable cost me ~$5 so even if I need an EEPROM I will likely still be ahead. What would you budget for a functioning setup?
Whatever I do spend, I can recover by selling my old remotes
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The Robman
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I don't know.gmaslin wrote:Are any of the new cablevision remotes that ship with the Scientific-Atlanta 4200 boxes or those that shipped with the Dish 500 IRD's suitable for JP1? In other words, are they also 'Atlas'?
Rob
www.hifi-remote.com
Please don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!
www.hifi-remote.com
Please don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!
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The Robman
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Read this...gmaslin wrote:Which EEPROM is the best to use on this unit and where are the instructions to put it in a 6131? Looking at the unit at hand, it appears to have a JP1 header without pins. Are there variations on this design for this model? Is a usb cable preferable to a parallel interface on this remote?
https://www.hifi-remote.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=2590
If you have a parallel port on your computer, your best bet as far as a cable is concerned is to build your own. Here's the design for one of those cables:
https://www.hifi-remote.com/forums/dload ... le_id=4562
If you need to buy a soldering iron, you can get one at Radio Shack for $12:
http://www.radioshack.com/product/index ... Id=2062738
Rob
www.hifi-remote.com
Please don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!
www.hifi-remote.com
Please don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!
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vickyg2003
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Or if it has learning, you could just learn it from the OEM remote if you still have it.gmaslin wrote:vickyg2003
A new modern remote will be ~$15 and as I understand it, I will still need a cable or some other method of communicating with it.
Wow, the cable only cost you ~$5? Is this an LPT cable? I can't imagine anyone getting so little for a USB EEPROM cable, or a Flash cable with an EEPROM adapter.I believe the 6131 has the EEPROM chip and pin interface. I will know better when I receive it. The cable cost me ~$5 so even if I need an EEPROM I will likely still be ahead. What would you budget for a functioning setup?
I know a cheap JP1.2/3 cable can be built, but the EEPROM adaptor is needed for those. I don't pay much attention to the build instructions because I don't like to solder.
I do know that I wouldn't invest heavily in yesterday's technology.
I know that my first cable cost me more than my remote, and I was really worried about that investment. I have never regretted that purchase. I just leveraged it by using it a lot!
Enjoy
Remember to provide feedback to let us know how the problem was solved and share your upgrades.
Tip: When creating an upgrade, always include ALL functions from the oem remote, even if you never plan on assigning them to a button. Complete function lists makes an upgrade more helpful to others.
Tip: When creating an upgrade, always include ALL functions from the oem remote, even if you never plan on assigning them to a button. Complete function lists makes an upgrade more helpful to others.
vickyg2003
I only had to buy the 1k resistors, everything else was salvage. May I ask why you would keep a mountain of remotes if they have all been cataloged? I am under the impression that once a remote is read and its command map extracted, there doesn't seem to be any use for it so why keep it? Are there situations where some commands don't translate or can't be mapped so that the original is still required?
The Robman
Bingo! That thread and its links appear to answer just about everything on my mind about what I plan on doing. I'm looking forward to getting started.
I only had to buy the 1k resistors, everything else was salvage. May I ask why you would keep a mountain of remotes if they have all been cataloged? I am under the impression that once a remote is read and its command map extracted, there doesn't seem to be any use for it so why keep it? Are there situations where some commands don't translate or can't be mapped so that the original is still required?
The Robman
Bingo! That thread and its links appear to answer just about everything on my mind about what I plan on doing. I'm looking forward to getting started.
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vickyg2003
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Oh these are not my original remotes. I keep the originals in a small box, for when I donate my equipment. The mountain is my JP1 spares. You wouldn't want me to have a panic attack if a JP1 remote ever failed, would you?gmaslin wrote:vickyg2003
I only had to buy the 1k resistors, everything else was salvage. May I ask why you would keep a mountain of remotes if they have all been cataloged?
Actually I really used to panic, when ever Rob's website would go down. That's why I worked so hard learning to decode and write protocol executors. It was obviously over my head, but I just kept banging away until I got it. I was always afraid that someday this site would disappear and I wouldn't have the support I needed to keep my JP1 remotes working. Once I got used to JP1 remotes, I would never want to go back to a regular universal, or heaven forbid, juggling multiple remotes.
vickyg2003
The convenience of having one remote is sort of mitigated when you reach your level of commitment
The Robman
I read one of your posts in another thread from 2003 that stated a 6131 remote was limited to a 2k EEPROM. Has anything changed since then to allow a larger memory space? About how many individual commands will fit in 2k?
The convenience of having one remote is sort of mitigated when you reach your level of commitment
The Robman
I read one of your posts in another thread from 2003 that stated a 6131 remote was limited to a 2k EEPROM. Has anything changed since then to allow a larger memory space? About how many individual commands will fit in 2k?
Last edited by gmaslin on Tue Nov 27, 2012 5:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
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vickyg2003
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They haven't committed me yet, although there has been talk.gmaslin wrote:vickyg2003
The convenience of having one remote is sort of mitigated when you reach your level of commitment![]()
We have his and hers remotes in every room, and in our main viewing areas we have guest remotes. So no matter where you're seated you have total control of the AV equipment in that room.
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The Robman
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No, it's still 2k bytes (or 16k bits - ie, a 24C16 type chip). But... for this remote that is a TON of memory! This remote doesn't support learning and the second 1k of memory is normally set aside for learning, so in this remote about 80% of the EEPROM memory is available for upgrades. It's only a 6 device remote, so even if you need to add 6 upgrades and each of them uses a big protocol upgrade, you'd still have plenty of room left over.gmaslin wrote:I read one of your posts in another thread from 2003 that stated a 6131 remote was limited to a 2k EEPROM. Has anything changed since then to allow a larger memory space? About how many individual commands will fit in 2k?
Rob
www.hifi-remote.com
Please don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!
www.hifi-remote.com
Please don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!
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vickyg2003
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Nah, that's not being a control freak, that's being a good hostess.gmaslin wrote:vickyg2003 brings new meaning to 'control freak'
A control freak is when you go into someone else's home, and set up your own personal remote to control all of their equipment.
BTW hope you saw Rob's 2K response above.
Remember to provide feedback to let us know how the problem was solved and share your upgrades.
Tip: When creating an upgrade, always include ALL functions from the oem remote, even if you never plan on assigning them to a button. Complete function lists makes an upgrade more helpful to others.
Tip: When creating an upgrade, always include ALL functions from the oem remote, even if you never plan on assigning them to a button. Complete function lists makes an upgrade more helpful to others.