hi, i was able to fix it but took me a lot of time of trial and errors to try to bring the screen into the range where turning the rod will cause the motor to work. When you get to a point where the motor will jog, you can then control the motor. You need to make sure that you turn the right limit screw left or right when the screen us at the bottom and when its at the top.
Hey Mate , I am having a bit of issue with my Dooya mtors , There are 3 of them working on single channel remote . With no reason 2 of them stuck closed . One is working fine . I contacted the supplier and was advised to get multi channel remote ( same as your video ) and program 2 of them to new remote . I have tried all trick in book and guidance from you video . But they are stuck . The made all proper beep sound of connection but dont move. Do you know some one who can come have a look and help . i am in south west sydney. Thank you
Hi, Is the single channel remote a Bluetooth one? I'm trying to integrate it with my smart home but couldn't figure out what device should I buy to control it rather than using the remote
Hello, I have a awning (right side motor) made with the dooya turbular motor. I got the remote set up and I was able to setup the closing limit however I have tried many times to set the limit for how far it opens but I does not seem to work. I have turned the white circle clockwise and counterclockwise wise but nothing has worked. Any ideas why?
Hello Aarish, I came across your comment and was wondering how did you solve it. I have exactly the same problem, where the motor will not repsond to the adjsutment rod.
@@StarOneBenefits Hi there, just seen your reply, did you ever find out how to do this ? Just fitted our awning and we can't set the adjustment rod, we have used the red and white circles using the green stick but does absolutely nothing ? hope you can help
I had to cut 12 mm polycarbonate with a jigsaw, and a fine tooth saw melted the material and jammed after a few seconds, so i then found that a coarse (wood) saw worked faster and did not melt.
That goes for all plastics. Being low(er) melting point than any metal, never use any fine tooth blade, unless you go very very VERY slow, such that you don't cause the plastic (and blade) to heat up, which causes the binding. I've learnt from my own experience. Should have seen this post first!
The hand saw makes sense, but I understand that cutting with a circular or table saw-even with a very fine blade-can melt the material, splatter the user with molten plastic, jam the blade, etc. ... No?
In general, fine-tooth blades are used for material of a thinner diameter such as tubes, plastic pipes, thin polycarbonateWe are using 3mm solid polycarbonate for our awnings and as long as you are careful not to apply too much pressure, blade will never jam or melt material. Thanks