I'm using a Logitech wireless gamepad (F710) and am noticing that it's automatic frequency hopping feature, which makes the joystick work well, is actually blowing away my wireless communications for another component I'm working on. There's a lot of Wifi noise in this area and so the spectrum that I'm using for this other critical component occasionally looks more appealing than others.

Does anyone know of any way I can set or restrict the frequencies that the gamepad can consider operating on so that it cannot interfere with the frequency that I am using for my other wireless components?

Thanks!

link|improve this question

75% accept rate
feedback

1 Answer

What are your other wireless components?

Logitech used to have a setting in the Logitech driver / software management tool, enabling you to switch channels.

link|improve this answer
We're using Zigbee for wireless communication between multiple nodes. They're much lower power than the joysticks so when they happen to hit the channel the nodes are on, they blow their communication away entirely. – bsofman Aug 22 '11 at 19:23
Based on what I read, the F710 broadcasts on 2.4 GHz spectrum (which ZigBee also uses in general), and Logitech uses a technique to do automatic frequency hopping and broadcasts on multiple simultaneously. I think they expect collisions to occur and will compensate for themselves - not taking into consideration any other devices in the spectrum. Sounds like ZigBee might be running at 2.4 in your case as well - 868 Mhz is only European, and 915 is more likely in Australia and some USA bound devices. – Joshua Aug 23 '11 at 3:49
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.