Industry A remote control is used for controlling substations, pump storage power stations and
HVDC-plants. For these systems often PLC-systems working in the longwave range are used.
Power line remote control A subset of
Power-Line communication that sends remote control signals over energized AC power lines. This was used to remotely control home automation before the invention of WIFI connected smart switches.
Garage and gate Garage and gate remote controls, also called clickers or openers, are very common especially in some countries such as the US, Australia, and the UK, where garage doors, gates and barriers are widely used. Such a remote is very simple by design, usually only one button, and some with more buttons to control several gates from one control. Such remotes can be divided into two categories by the encoder type used: fixed code and
rolling code. If you find dip-switches in the remote, it is likely to be fixed code, an older technology which was widely used. However, fixed codes have been criticized for their (lack of) security, thus rolling code has been more and more widely used in later installations.
Military , one of the earliest "guided missiles" Remotely operated torpedoes were demonstrated in the late 19th century in the form of several types of remotely controlled
torpedoes. The early 1870s saw remotely controlled
torpedoes by
John Ericsson (
pneumatic),
John Louis Lay (electric wire guided), and Victor von Scheliha (electric wire guided). The
Brennan torpedo, invented by
Louis Brennan in 1877 was powered by two contra-rotating propellers that were spun by rapidly pulling out wires from drums wound inside the
torpedo. Differential speed on the wires connected to the shore station allowed the torpedo to be guided to its target, making it "the world's first
practical guided missile". In 1898
Nikola Tesla publicly demonstrated a "wireless" radio-controlled
torpedo that he hoped to sell to the
U.S. Navy.
Archibald Low was known as the "father of radio guidance systems" for his pioneering work on guided rockets and planes during the
First World War. In 1917, he demonstrated a remote-controlled aircraft to the
Royal Flying Corps and in the same year built the first wire-guided rocket. As head of the secret
RFC experimental works at
Feltham, A. M. Low was the first person to use radio control successfully on an aircraft, an
"Aerial Target". It was "piloted" from the ground by future world aerial speed record holder
Henry Segrave. Low's systems encoded the command transmissions as a countermeasure to prevent enemy intervention. By 1918, the secret
D.C.B. Section of the Royal Navy's Signals School, Portsmouth under the command of
Eric Robinson V.C. used a variant of the Aerial Target's radio control system to control from ‘mother’ aircraft different types of naval vessels including a submarine. The military also developed several early remote control vehicles. In
World War I, the
Imperial German Navy employed
FL-boats (Fernlenkboote) against coastal shipping. These were driven by
internal combustion engines and controlled remotely from a shore station through several miles of wire wound on a spool on the boat. An aircraft was used to signal directions to the shore station. EMBs carried a high explosive charge in the bow and traveled at speeds of thirty knots. The Soviet
Red Army used remotely controlled
teletanks during the 1930s in the
Winter War against
Finland and the early stages of
World War II. A teletank is controlled by radio from a control tank at a distance of 500 to 1,500 meters, the two constituting a
telemechanical group. The Red Army fielded at least two teletank battalions at the beginning of the
Great Patriotic War. There were also remotely controlled cutters and experimental remotely controlled planes in the Red Army. Remote controls in military usage employ
jamming and countermeasures against jamming. Jammers are used to disable or sabotage the enemy's use of remote controls. The distances for military remote controls also tend to be much longer, up to intercontinental distance satellite-linked remote controls used by the U.S. for their
unmanned airplanes (drones) in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan. Remote controls are used by insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan to attack coalition and government troops with roadside
improvised explosive devices, and terrorists in Iraq are reported in the media to use modified TV remote controls to detonate bombs.
Space In the winter of 1971, the Soviet Union explored the surface of the Moon with the lunar vehicle
Lunokhod 1, the first roving remote-controlled robot to land on another celestial body. Remote control technology is also used in space travel, for instance, the Soviet
Lunokhod vehicles were remote-controlled from the ground. Many
space exploration rovers can be remotely controlled, though vast distance to a vehicle results in a long time delay between transmission and receipt of a command.
PC control Existing infrared remote controls can be used to control
PC applications. Any application that supports shortcut keys can be controlled via infrared remote controls from other home devices (TV, VCR, AC). This is widely used with multimedia applications for PC based home theater systems. For this to work, one needs a device that decodes IR remote control data signals and a PC application that communicates to this device connected to PC. A connection can be made via serial port, USB port or motherboard
IrDA connector. Such devices are commercially available but can be homemade using low-cost microcontrollers.
LIRC (Linux IR Remote control) and WinLIRC (for Windows) are software packages developed for the purpose of controlling PC using TV remote and can be also used for homebrew remote with lesser modification.
Photography Canon EOS 100 from 1991 Remote controls are used in photography, in particular to take long-exposure shots. Many action cameras such as the GoPros as well as standard DSLRs including Sony's Alpha series incorporate Wi-Fi based remote control systems. These can often be accessed and even controlled via cell-phones and other mobile devices.
Video games Video game consoles had not used wireless controllers until recently, mainly because of the difficulty involved in playing the game while keeping the infrared transmitter pointed at the console. Early wireless controllers were cumbersome and when powered on alkaline batteries, lasted only a few hours before they needed replacement. Some wireless controllers were produced by third parties, in most cases using a radio link instead of infrared. Even these were very inconsistent, and in some cases, had transmission delays, making them virtually useless. Some examples include the Double Player for
NES, the Master System Remote Control System and the Wireless Dual Shot for the
PlayStation. The first official wireless game controller made by a first party manufacturer was the CX-42 for
Atari 2600. The
Philips CD-i 400 series also came with a remote control, the
WaveBird was also produced for the
GameCube. In the
seventh generation of gaming consoles, wireless controllers became standard. Some wireless controllers, such as those of the
PlayStation 3 and
Wii, use
Bluetooth. Others, like the
Xbox 360, use proprietary wireless protocols. ==Standby power==