I have lost my Roku remote and trying to set device up to new WiFi and the Roku app tells me the device can not be found
Right, you have to have a real remote initially to set up wifi on Roku, since the Roku app on the cellphone won't work until its set to same wifi credentials as the Roku. What model and number of Roku do you have?
I have the same problem. The model number of my onn.roku tv is #100012586. I would appreciate any suggestions. I have a remote for another roku device but I don't know how to pair it to the tv.
@rdgutz Try following these directions. Unless you have a fairly old other remote it should work. Scroll down until you find directions when you have no functioning remote. https://support.roku.com/article/360011621473
Did not find the article/instructions you referred to at that link.
(I successfully used this method recently when visiting my timeshare. I brought a Roku from home and needed to configure it for the timeshare's network, but found the remote's batteries were dead, rendering the remote useless.)
This method is complicated, but if you really need it …
You will need ALL of these:
-- A Roku that is still set up for its prior network. If it was no longer connecting to that network when you shut it down, if you have cleared its network settings, or if you have done a factory reset, your only recourse is to use a compatible physical remote to set the Roku network connection up.
-- Knowledge of the network name (SSID) and password from the former network that the Roku is currently configured to use.
-- A mobile phone with WiFi hotspot capabilities.
-- A second WiFi-equipped mobile device, either a phone or tablet, with the official Roku Mobile app (not TheRokuChannel app) installed.
If you have all these things, here's how you do it:
1.) Configure the WiFi hotspot on your mobile phone to use the same network name (SSID) and password from your former home network that the Roku is currently configured to use. If your hotspot can use the 5 GHz WiFi band, switch it to the 2.4 GHz band for compatibility with all Roku models.
2.) After you turn on this hotspot, pull the power plug on your Roku for a few seconds then plug it back in. When the Roku starts up it should connect to the hotspot and through the phone to the internet. You just won't be able to control the Roku yet.
3.) Connect your second device (phone or tablet) to the first phone's WiFi hotspot network.
4.) Now that this second device and your Roku are both connected to the same WiFi hotspot, you can run the Roku app on the second device to gain control of your Roku using the app's remote control capabilities.
5.) Using the app on the second device, set up the new network on the Roku, via Settings > Network > Set up network, using the new network's SSID and password.
6.) When the Roku connects to the new network, disconnect the second mobile device from the WiFi hotspot and connect it to the new home network (SSID and password).
7.) You can now continue to use the Roku app on the second device to operate your Roku on the new network.
8.) The Roku is no longer connecting to your phone's WiFi hotspot, so you can shut that down. If you wish, you can also use the Roku app on this phone to control your Roku.
I'd still suggest acquiring a compatible remote if only to make it much easier to recover if your Roku ever drops its network connection and needs to be reconnected.
@rdgutz Unplug your Roku device for about a minute. When you plug it back in it should be in pairing mode. Then go to the link I provided and click on preparing your voice remote for pairing. Edited post to indicate that this advice does not work for a TV with a Roku operating system but only works for Roku devices that connect to a TV. Sorry for any confustion that I have caused.
@rdgutz, is your remote from the other Roku device a Voice remote with a microphone button? If not, it won't work with a Roku TV. If it is, you have to factory reset the TV to get the remote to pair.
@renojim Is Onn different from TCL Roku TV? I just paired a Roku Voice remote to my TCL TV without doing a factory reset. I did have a working remote to put the TV in pairing mode
@HDMIGuy, it's the having a working remote that's the difference. Unlike other Roku devices, I don't think TVs go into remote pairing mode when they're powered up, so you need to use a working remote or the app and of course the app only works if the TV is connected to a network. I'm not absolutely positive that the only way to pair a remote without having a way to navigate the TV's menu is to factory reset it, but they have to go into pairing mode after a factory reset or you'd never get a remote to work.