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03 May

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared

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Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared

Preprogrammed and Learning remote control combines 7 remote controls into 1. 4 My Favorite Channel Buttons. MacroPower and SimpleSound Volume Control.

URC-WR7 Universal Remote: Sophisticated, Not Complicated

You just got a brand new Blu-ray player–that’s great news. That means you’ll soon be enjoying the best Hollywood has to offer. It also means you’ll have another remote control on your coffee table. How a good deal of does that make, now? Five? Six? It doesn’t have to be that way.

The  URC-WR7  Universal  Remote
Replace all your old remotes with the URC-WR7
Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared Picture

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared Pic

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared Picture

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared

Xantech Xtr39 Universal Control Infrared Picture


Most helpful client reviews

55 of 56 humans found the following review helpful.
4Learning function is teriffic
By Kelly M. Jones
I purchased this to replace my universal remote that the dogs chewed up. This remote has various features, and lots of buttons. I like the red light up buttons as it makes it so much posing no difficulty to find the button I am looking for in the dark.
My favourite thing in regards to this remote is the a great deal of ways in which to find that pesky code. I find that often typing in the code for your brand of TV, VCR, whatsoever doesn’t work and you may spend hours attempting to figure out the proper code. There are at least four dissimilar ways (including a list of codes) to program this remote so something will work for your device. My favourite thing is the “learning” mode. You plainly put it into “learning” mode and then copy the functions from your old remote to the new one and you may choose which buttons go where. I programmed my TV, cable box, and DVD player all within with regards to 5 minutes and without having to enter a single code. Brilliant! Plus I was capable to transfer the sleep function onto a key of my choice (that is the only button that seems to be missing from this remote).

My only complaint is that it is rather large, but that may be a good thing too as it’s more comfortable to spot in the couch cushions or under a blanket.

28 of 29 persons found the following review helpful.
5Does everything it’s supposed to do, and does it well
By Martin Ralya
I wanted a universal remote for our home theater setup (Panasonic TV, Onkyo receiver, Tivo, and Sony Blu-ray) that didn’t cost that much and didn’t suck; from the reviews I’d read, most universal remotes seemed to do one or the other — cost more than I wanted to spend (Harmony) or suck in at least one important way. This remote seemed to be well-reviewed, and it was a nice price.

It delivers: It took me 15 minutes to program it for all four devices, soup to nuts. Its quick-program function found the TV; it is “scroll through codes” function found all three other devices. Then I set up punch-through audio, so that the receiver was the only audio output no matter of mode; macro power-on and -off, so that one button turns on the TV and receiver, and another turns everything off; and used the learning feature to instruct it the dozen or so specialized buttons I necessitated from other remotes (Tivo skip back/ahead, Blu-ray open/close and chapter forward/back, etc.).

In terms of downsides, it’s heavy, but not uncomfortably so (and surely not to the point of being an issue), and it lacks galore key buttons for a DVD or Blu-ray player, like open/close. Most universal remotes seem to be missing those, however, and it wasn’t hard to pick unused buttons and map those functions to them.

I love the one-button backlighting, and the button layout overall is excellent. The tips in the manual are helpful — for example, it recommends that if you have a plasma TV, you take it into another room to instruct it button functions from other remotes; that did the trick for me. Having three programming modes was very handy.

On the whole it does what it says on the tin for a outstanding price, and is an splendid remote.

24 of 25 persons found the following review helpful.
5Friendly, reliable, powerful, cheap
By JLR
The WR7 is the best remote I’ve owned. I love it. So does my wife. It does everything I want (and I’m picky), is guest-friendly and geek-friendly, and it costs twenty bucks. You ought to buy it.

Other reviews have summarized well what’s outstanding regarding this remote, so I’m just going to add a lot of geek details.

What I love:
– Separate on and off buttons. Simple, but a huge ease-of-use win. Many widgets now have discrete on/off codes, and this remote ultimately lets you use them. A huge aid to reliability when you’ve programmed a “system on” macro.
– No LCD screen. Nice idea, but more often than not a crutch that replaces good design. Demands that you look down at the remote, takes space away from keys, and is quintessentially butt-ugly.
– Programmable macros, even on the device keys. So you may program the “DVD” button to switch the inputs on the receiver, the “TV” button to switch the Tivo to live TV mode, etc. Similar to the much-hyped “activity based” Harmony/Logitech remotes.
– Decent IR emitter. So you scarcely ever have to hit a key more than once, and macros carry through reliably.
– “Punch through” capability on most keys, so that the volume up/down keys may control the AV receiver volume no matter which device the rest of the remote is talking to.
– Decent remote code database, and decent learning capability.

I’ve set ours up so that “power on” turns everything on using discrete codes, switches the receiver to the Tivo, sends the Tivo to the “Now playing” screen, and leaves the remote talking to the Tivo. This is 80% of our use cases taken care of. The “power off” key switches everything off using discrete codes, there’s another 10% of the use cases. All of the device keys power up the applicable widgets and switch the receiver inputs.

My last remote was a One-For-All 9910 that I’d JP1′d the heck out of, and this remote is better in almost all respects from a usability point of view. The 9910 was far more hackable, but for all the venture the end result was unsatisfying. Too a good deal of keys, and yet still missing some.

There are two distinct features that could be bettered in this remote:
– Programming “advanced codes” is a bit weak. There’s a way to access any key code the device’s IR protocol may support, but it’s hard to use. Since my firstborn manufacturer’s remotes didn’t have keys for the discrete power on/off codes, I in truth relied on my former remote (the 9910) to support learn those.
– Wish it had RF, so it could go through the cabinet doors. The after-market RF extenders are a stopgap that I’m considering, but they don’t look that outstanding and are way more costly than the remote.

All up, I’m exceedingly happy with WR7. If you’re up for a little bit of programming, you may make this one fine remote.

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