I am trying to create a remote in Flipper for my Lutron Blind but unfortunately not successful, can someone advice how to be done ? Thanks
Can you provide more info? What is the problem?
Quick tip: open Sub-GHz, then open frequency analyzer. Place you’r RC near Flipper, then press and hold any button on you’r remote. When you see a frequency, go to read, change frequency in config, then try push any button on you’r remote. If you see an frequency bar at bottom, and RC is not recognized, then go back, and use Read RAW function.
Thanks the frequency I have captured using analyzer is 433.419 but the configuration does not allow me to change to this value, it show 433.42. When I use read to try to capture the frequency I can’t save the frequency
When you use 433.42, do you see a singnal bar at bottom (in read function)?
Try to read raw, always with different modulation. Then try to send and check if it works.
Im not expert to RF signals, but I think I can say, that 433.419 and 433.42 is the same. For example: I have a small RF controller for my LED stripe. FZ can read code (config 433.92, mod AM650). But when I use frequency scanner, I see frequencies: 433.: 939, 919, 959, … .
And maybe… . You’r wireless switch have maybe more transmission power than Flipper. Try to capture all signals each with different modulation, and go near the receiver. Then try to transmit signals.
Please give me echo if it works or not.
I have tried using Read Raw, I can capture the signal but I try to send it it won’t work. Not sure how it to get this going !
And the modulation? Did you try each modulation?
I did, all available modulation of 433. xxx
As somebody that has worked for Lutron and now works for another Lighting Controls specialist, this “was” possible. If your blind module is over 5 years old and it’s not recently been maintained by a commissioning engineer then it is 100% still possible. If it has recieved a more recent firmware update, then afraid you may struggle. This very product and subject was covered at the 2023 LuxLive event in London and the Light+Build in Frankfurt due to the sheer amount of commercial grade luminaires that use RF, Bluetooth and various other wireless protocols.