What do you use your homelink for?
#1
What do you use your homelink for?
What else are you guys using your homelink for besides your garage. I am thinking of getting some remote receivers for some interior home lights or maybe for some exterior home lights- I haven't decided yet.
I know someone that has their sprinkler programmed to use homelink. He turns it on when he leaves for work and it automatically cuts off in 20 min.
Any other ideas?
I know someone that has their sprinkler programmed to use homelink. He turns it on when he leaves for work and it automatically cuts off in 20 min.
Any other ideas?
Last edited by KAHBOOM; 10-16-2007 at 10:20 AM.
#8
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Albuquerque, NM
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I think the lights idea would be nice, also maybe have one hooked up to the ac/heater so you can have that starting up while you're going inside.
#11
Registered User
iTrader: (2)
I'm willing to say this is a joke. I highly doubt you were able to do this unless he gave you access to his remotes and/or the actual unit itself for you to program it.
I think the lights idea would be nice, also maybe have one hooked up to the ac/heater so you can have that starting up while you're going inside.
I think the lights idea would be nice, also maybe have one hooked up to the ac/heater so you can have that starting up while you're going inside.
#13
Registered User
All common garage doors and openers use a fairly standard binary "poke some pins on and some pins off" code, as far as I know. Mine is from 03 and it works like this. If I change both the opener and remote, there is no "sync up" to be performed--it just works.
It's not a stretch to match your opener to someone else's pin configuration and think that it might work on that door. I do know that pranksters (and thieves) use transmitters that just blast every combo for a brute force attack on garage doors.
It's not a stretch to match your opener to someone else's pin configuration and think that it might work on that door. I do know that pranksters (and thieves) use transmitters that just blast every combo for a brute force attack on garage doors.
#14
All common garage doors and openers use a fairly standard binary "poke some pins on and some pins off" code, as far as I know. Mine is from 03 and it works like this. If I change both the opener and remote, there is no "sync up" to be performed--it just works.
It's not a stretch to match your opener to someone else's pin configuration and think that it might work on that door. I do know that pranksters (and thieves) use transmitters that just blast every combo for a brute force attack on garage doors.
It's not a stretch to match your opener to someone else's pin configuration and think that it might work on that door. I do know that pranksters (and thieves) use transmitters that just blast every combo for a brute force attack on garage doors.
Last edited by pensfan; 11-25-2007 at 07:28 PM.