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Canon RC-1 IR remote control reverse-engineered

This article describes how the Canon RC-1 infrared remote control communicates with the camera. To figure out the protocol I used an IR photo-diode first. Because of the bad signal quality I decided then to disassemble the RC-1 and measure the IR-LED voltage directly. I used the occasion and took some pics of the circuit.

canon rc-1 disassembled canon rc-1 disassembled

To all appearances the circuit is build around a quartz-controlled microcontroller with an additional transistor to switch the IR-LED. The supply capacitor is large enough to maintain the function of the remote control for a few shots with removed batteries.

Communication protocol

To the hobbyist's delight there is no communication protocol like the RC-5 code which most TV remote controls use. The signal send by the remote control consists of two identical bursts of pulses as shown on the pics below. To distinguish between the two possible modes of operation of the Canon RC-1, the delay between the bursts is changed. The signal shown in the oscilloscope screenshots below was captured directly at the IR-LED of the circuit. The overlaid noise in some plots is due to an internal oscilloscope problem.

Timing for instant trigger mode

canon remote protocol canon remote protocol

Timing for 2s delayed trigger mode

canon remote protocol canon remote protocol

Pulse burst Timing

canon remote protocol canon remote protocol canon remote protocol

Timing and Tolerances

The signal timing of the original Canon RC-1 is listed in the table below. Having build my own remote control I could also find out the tolerance for each parameter. I used the Canon EOS 400D for testing.

Parameter Original RC-1 Tolerance
Num. of pulses 16 9 - 22
Burst frequency 32700 Hz 29800 - 35500 Hz
Delay for immediate trigger 7.33 ms 7.0 - 7.7 ms
Delay for 2 s delayed trigger 5.36 ms 5.1 - 5.7 ms

The clock frequency is very close to the standard watch crystal frequency of 32768 Hz. The experiments were made from a very short distance. I didn't test the sensitivity reduction for the deviating parameters and didn't test them in combination.

Links

How to build a DIY Canon RC-1 clone

Comments (5)

What worked with my Canon 60D
I've managed to make it work with my Canon 60D by having the HPERIOD value set to 11 rather than 15.
#5 - Jul - 08/25/2016 - 02:16
Thanks! Works perfect.
Hi, thank You very much for sharing. A hint from my side: It works better after switch Drive Mode to 10s/Remote ;-)
#4 - Anonymous - 05/09/2016 - 21:06
Not working - a possible solution
Hi,

I found that on my EOS 450D remote trigged only works if I send 20 pulses. Maybe this helps somebody ;)
#3 - Phantom - 01/11/2012 - 18:37
Help
I m trying to open this debugging IR remote page in my browser but it is showing some error why is so can somebody help me out.
#2 - advertising products - 10/08/2010 - 07:49
I've just added a section about debugging IR remote here

http://doc-diy.net/photo/eos_ir_remote/#debugging

Luk
#1 - luk - 04/06/2010 - 11:00
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