Here are the components/devices that I would like to integrate into one remote.
Pioneer VSX-822-K Receiver
Pioneer Elite KURO 151 Plasma
LG Blu-Ray Internet Box
Playstation (Not a must)
Wii (Again, more for listing components, not a must at all)
Direct TV set-top box (important)
Fairly standard.
As of now there are at least 4 remotes.
I've heard some people liking the Harmony remotes -- I just want the simplest to setup, and easiest to use. If it warrants a little heavier price,.. but is miles above the rest that is ok.
I also will likely have a component running to audio input on the receiver, and then a different input for video on the plasma tv -- so the remote would need to do some dual input switching on two devices with one press of a button.
Touch screen?
Are they delicate?
Easy to use?
Easy to setup?
Model recommendations?
Any and all opinions welcome. I'm just entertaining the idea here.
Harmony 600 will handle everything you listed. If you want something prettier, look at the 650 or 700. No universal remote will control a Wii. Higher end models have touch screens, but I find those totally unnecessary. All are extremely easy to set up and use.
Quote:
Originally Posted by mdavej /t/1417295/all-in-one-remote-the-best-for-my-application-recommendations#post_22163929
Harmony 600 will handle everything you listed. If you want something prettier, look at the 650 or 700. No universal remote will control a Wii. Higher end models have touch screens, but I find those totally unnecessary. All are extremely easy to set up and use.
I second the notion about the harmony remote. I have a harmony 720. it works great. it has a charger for the battery. it uses a software program. it can be difficult at first. but once you get going its great.
I have had a Harmony 510 for a couple years. My HT setup is reasonably complex. I had a Blu-ray player, a Onyko AV Receiver, a Roku box, a Comcast/Motorola DVR set-top box, and a Mitsubishi projector. My set-top box is in the other room so I cut a hole in the wall to routed the cables into my HT/Den closet where I keep the other equipment. This means I have to have an IR to RF to IR link.
Now it is all getting more complex yet. I replaced my Panasonic 65 Blu-ray with a Panasonic 220. The new one is 3D (and the old one wouldn't play Blu-rays anymore). The new BD player would respond to many but not all of the codes for the old player. I needed to find the programming cable to download the new codes. But fate intervened.
My Harmony began to have a very flaky key for switching the major components e.g. (Disk to Roku). I read on Amazon that that is a very common problem with Harmony remotes irrespective of the model. Apparently after a year or two one or more of the buttons stops working reliably. To get to my Roku box I needed to click the function button maybe a hundred times. Eventually it would work but it took a long long time.
I also ordered a new Sony 3D HMZ helmet yesterday. I didn't have room on the Harmony for another device. I wasn't quite sure what I was going to do.
Then I had a new cleaning crew come in yesterday. I no longer know where my Harmony is (or several other items). Last night I dug up all my remotes and watched TV (actually a 110" screen). I'd forgotten how complex and frustrating that can be. So this morning I decided to get a new Universal Remote.
I looked up TopTenreviews and the Harmony website. The top three remotes they recommend are the Harmony one, the Harmony 700, and the Harmony 650. The 650 is listed at $80. Then I went to Amazon. The Harmonys are much cheaper there and get good user reviews except that the buttons seem to fail after a year or two. Amazon also sells the URC remotes - much, much cheaper than the Harmonys. I bought a URC WR7 for $19.00. There are other URCs for ten dollars.There are off brands for $5.
The big difference seems to be that the Logitech Harmonys plug into the Internet and allow you to painlessly program your remote. The URCs don't do that. Apparently you teach the universal remote to learn the codes of the original remote by pointing one at the other. I don't know how difficult this is. Some reviewers say its easy others say it's hard. I'll know Tuesday and I will update this post.
There are no mentions in any of the reviews of the URC remotes having key reliability problems so that's a plus. At less than twenty dollars the URC remote is almost a throwaway item. If I don't like it I'll just keep it as a backup and buy a Harmony 650. The cleaners only come once a week. If they misplace the new Harmony again I would like to have an even half way working universal remote. Anything would be better than trying to use all those separate remotes for a week until they show me where they put it.
I agree you don't need to spend a lot for a good universal. You are paying mostly for easy programming and a display. My $5 JP1 remotes are far more powerful than a $200 harmony, but not as easy to program. Probably not the solution the OP is looking for, so I didn't mention it. The WR7 is a good remote, but far less capable than JP1 or harmony in terms of macros and discretes.
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Related Threads
?
?
?
?
?
AVS Forum
34M posts
1.5M members
Since 1999
A forum community dedicated to home theater owners and enthusiasts. Come join the discussion about home audio/video, TVs, projectors, screens, receivers, speakers, projects, DIY’s, product reviews, accessories, classifieds, and more!