Turning Subwoofer ON/OFF

When the subwoofer is on, you can adjust the subwoofer output level (refer to page 20).

OFF ON (Initial setting)

Setting the Subwoofer System

When the subwoofer is on, you can select either SYS 1 or SYS 2 for the desired subwoofer effect.

SYS 1 (Initial setting) SYS 2

SYS 1 : Subwoofer level changes according to the main volume setting.

SYS 2 : Subwoofer level change is different from the main volume setting. For example, even at low volume settings, the subwoofer is still audible.

Setting the Subwoofer Phase

NORMAL (Initial setting) REVERSE

The subwoofer output phase is toggled SUBWOOFER NORMAL (0°) or SUBWOOFER REVERSE (180°). To adjust the level, turn the

Rotary encoder.

Setting the Subwoofer Channel

(SUBW CHANNEL)

You can set the subwoofer output to stereo or monaural. Make sure to set the correct output for your subwoofer type.

STEREO (Initial setting) MONO

STEREO : Subwoofer stereo (L/R) output

MONO : Subwoofer monaural output

Setting the Response Slope for the High Range Speaker (TW Setup)

Depending on the response characteristics of the speaker, care should be taken when setting the response slope of the high range speaker to FLAT in 2.2ch (3WAY) mode (see “Adjusting the Crossover Settings (X-OVER)” on page 35), as speaker damage may result.

FACTORY’S (Initial setting) USER’S

FACTORY’S :As protection from possible speaker damage, FLAT cannot be set for the response slope of the high range speaker in 2.2ch (3WAY) mode.

USER’S : The FLAT setting is possible in 2.2ch (3WAY) mode.

Setting EQ mode

This setting gives you a choice of 5-band parametric, or 7-band graphic equalizer.

PARAMETRIC (Initial setting) GRAPHIC

Setting the Filter type

NORMAL (Initial setting) INDIVIDUAL

NORMAL (L=R) : Left and right speakers are adjusted equally.

INDIVIDUAL (L/R) : Left and right speakers are individually adjusted.

Setting the Time Correction Unit (TCR Parameter)

You can change the unit, (cm or inch) of time correction.

CM (Initial setting) INCH

Setting the MX Level

MX (Media Xpander) makes vocals or instruments sound distinct regardless of the music source. The FM radio, CD, USB memory and iPhone/iPod, will be able to reproduce the music clearly.

Changing the source to which you want to apply Media Xpander.

FM (MX level 1 to 3):

The medium to high frequencies become clearer, and produces well balanced sound at all frequencies.

CD (MX level 1 to 3):

CD mode processes a large amount of data during playback. MX takes advantage of this large data quantity to reproduce a more clear, clean output.

CMPM/SAT (MX level 1 to 3):

This corrects information that was lost at the time of compression. This reproduces a well-balanced sound close to the original.

DVD (MX level 1 to 3):

A DVD or Video CD contains a large quantity of data such as music clip. MX uses this data to reproduce the sound accurately.

AUX (MX level 1 to 3):

Choose the MX mode (CMPM, MOVIE, or MUSIC) that corresponds to the media connected.

The initial setting of MX is different depending on the source.

Each music source, such as FM radio, CD, and MP3/WMA/AAC can have its own MX setting.

On discs with both MP3/WMA/AAC and CD-DA, when the source changes from “MP3/WMA/AAC to CD-DA” or “CD-DA to MP3/WMA/AAC”, MX-mode switching may delay playback slightly.

Setting to Non Effect sets MX mode of each music source to OFF.

This function is inoperable when DEFEAT is set to ON.

There is no MX mode for AM radio.

If an audio processor with the MX function (PXA-H701, etc.) is connected, its own MX processing is applied to the music source. Since the processor MX settings may not match the head unit, the audio processor needs to be adjusted. For details, refer to the Owner’s Manual of the audio processor.

“CMPM” is applied for MP3/WMA/AAC and iPhone/iPod.

“SAT” is applied for XM radio and SIRIUS radio.

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