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It's a weird thing, but I have read that LED lights do indeed interrupt the remote signal.
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Location: Fort Worth
The frequencies that openers use now is crap and so is the wattage of the transmitter. During the swap to digital TV and the reallocation of bands allot was won and lost. Cellphone carriers got more frequencies to work with as 2 wasn't enough. Remote control cars and planes lost their freqs and so did gdo companies and those were given for military use.
So while the use of older openers is ok it's now illegal to use many of the older rc plane transmitters. Nothing new can use them
So what they did was give those uses fewer frequencies and in things like the rc world they use less freqs but now the units basically encode so they won't cross talk with others. (Simplified explanation)
Garage door openers got a crapper frequency and wattage that is awful. All it takes is a tiny bit of interference and it won't work well. So bad that remote antennas are popular now.
My parents used to open from the street 150'+ away. The new opener barely works with you in the car in front of the door. And it's a wood door so no metal to block it and windows towards the street.
Basically in your case you have a 4' fixture with an electronic ballast which puts out quite a bit of RFI to begin with and now you have added led bulbs that have circuitry that takes the very high output voltage of the ballast and brings it down to 12 or 5v eventually. So lots of RFI noise being created and poor opener electronics to boot.
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My old garage door operator would not function with cfls. When I replaced it, the new one works fine.
You can get cfls the function in cold weather (the temperature range is printed on the side of the bulb) and I use those for my outdoor lighting. But in the very cold weather they can take 5 minutes to reach brightness. So LEDs would be an advantage. I still have some incandescent bulbs in the house and I continue to use them on the garage doors as they are lit for a very short time and therefore don't draw much current.
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