Chapter 4Settings — [SIGNAL LIST] menu

ff To cancel the deletion, press the <MENU> button to return to the [REGISTERED SIGNAL LIST] screen.

3)Press the <ENTER> button.

ff The selected signal will be deleted.

Note

ff A registered signal can also be deleted from [REGISTERED SIGNAL DELETE] on the [REGISTERED SIGNAL SETUP] screen.

Protecting the registered signal

1)Press asqw to select the signal to protect.

2)Press the <ENTER> button.

ff The [REGISTERED SIGNAL STATUS] screen is displayed.

3)Press the <ENTER> button.

ff The [REGISTERED SIGNAL SETUP] screen is displayed.

4)Press as to select [LOCK].

5)Press qw to switch the item.

ff The items will switch each time you press the button.

[OFF]

The signal is not protected.

[ON]

The signal is protected.

Note

ff When [LOCK] is set to [ON], signal deletion, image adjustment, and automatic setup are not available. To perform these operations, set [LOCK] to [OFF].

ff A signal can be registered to the sub memory even if it is protected. ff Even a protected signal will be deleted if [INITIALIZE] is executed.

Expanding signal lock-in range

1)Press asqw to select the signal to set.

2)Press the <ENTER> button.

ff The [REGISTERED SIGNAL STATUS] screen is displayed.

3)Press the <ENTER> button.

ff The [REGISTERED SIGNAL SETUP] screen is displayed.

4)Press as to select [LOCK-IN RANGE].

5)Press qw to switch the item.

ff The items will switch each time you press the button.

[NARROW]

Select in most cases.

[WIDE]

Widens the lock-in range.

Note

ff Switch the range that determines that a signal to be input is the same signal that is already registered.

ff To prioritize the determination that it is the same signal that is already registered, set to the [WIDE] setting.

ff Use in cases such as when the synchronizing frequency of a signal to be input has changed slightly, or multiple signal lists are registered. ff Can only be used when a signal is input from the <RGB 1 IN> terminal, <RGB 2 IN> terminal, <DVI-D IN> terminal, or <HDMI IN> terminal. ff When [WIDE] is set, the image may appear distorted because a signal is determined to be the same signal even if a synchronizing

frequency changes slightly.

ff When a signal to be input corresponds to multiple signals set in [WIDE], a registered signal with a high memory number receives priority. Example: a signal to be input that corresponds to memory numbers A2, A4 and B1 will be determined to be B1.

ff When a registration signal is deleted, the settings are also deleted.

ff In an environment where multiple types of signals are input to the same terminal, signals are sometimes not determined correctly when the setting is set to [WIDE].

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