Basic Operation

Switching ANALOG/DIGITAL Signal Input

This button selects the type of input signal, ANALOG, DIGITAL or 2 RF, sent to the amplifier. You need to take special care to switch to the appropriate input when necessary. For example, the switch would have to be on DIGITAL to hear DOLBY DIGITAL, MPEG or DTS surround sound material but it would have to be on analog to record from the ANALOG out jacks on the amplifier. The default setting is AUTO which chooses digital over analog when both are available but goes with whatever is available if it is the only choice.

Amplifier

MAIN

SUB

SUB

TONE

BASS/

 

 

 

TREBLE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EFFECT/

 

DISPLAY

VIDEO

CH SEL.

 

DIMMER

SELECT

 

 

 

STATUS

SPEAKER

LOUDNESS

INPUT

 

 

A/B

 

ATT.

1

SYSTEM

 

TAPE 2

SIGNAL

SETUP

 

MONITOR

SELECT

1Press the SIGNAL SELECT button on

the SUB screen.

Each press switches the signal in the order below:

AUTO ANALOG DIGITAL 2RF

1

memo

In the AUTO setting, amplifier chooses the signal, based on availability, in the following order of priority:

2 RF, DIGITAL, ANALOG.

When DIGITAL signal is selected, 2 DIGITAL lights when a Dolby Digital signal is input; DTS lights when a DTS signal is input.

If no digital inputs (see p.80) are assigned, the SIGNAL SELECT will default to ANALOG.

Because the audio signal from a karaoke microphone and LDs are recorded with analog audio only, they are not output from the digital outputs. Set SIGNAL SELECT to ANALOG to listen to these formats.

When an LD with DTS is played back with the SIGNAL SELECT set in ANALOG, digital noise caused by playing back the DTS signal directly (with no decoding) is output. To prevent noise, you need to make digital connections (See p.24 & 25) and set SIGNAL SELECT to AUTO or DIGITAL.

Some DVD players don’t output DTS signals. For more details, refer to the instruction manual supplied with your DVD player.

This amplifier can only play back Dolby Digital, MPEG, PCM (32kHz, 44kHz, 48kHz, 88kHz and 96kHz sampling frequency), and DTS digital signal formats. If your source is not one of these select ANALOG for playback.

Make sure you connect your DVD/LD or LD players using the 2 RF jack. If your player has a 2 RF output this will ensure you can use all LDs. Refer to p.19.

Playback of 96kHz 24 bit sound formats

This amplifier is capable of playing back 96kHz/24bit sound formats (such as DTS 96/24 and PCM 96kHz (up to 24bit).

To Playback with the Best Sound Quality (all processing is done at 96 kHz).

For DTS 96/24 5.1 format, connect both center and surround left/right speakers, set LISTENING CH SELECT to AUTO or 5.1, choose STANDARD mode and turn off all sound functions. For 96kHz 2ch format (either DTS or PCM) choose STEREO mode and turn off sound functions. For both these playbacks, "96kHz" will appear in the amplifier's display. If it doesn't the processing is being done at 48kHz.

You can listen to DTS 96/24 soundtracks through this amplifier if your DVD player has a DTS output feature, even if it can't output 96kHz digital signals. For PCM 96kHz soundtracks, however, you won't be able to listen to them with digital connections if your DVD player can't output 96kHz digital signals. Also, if you set RE-EQ on you won't be able to get 96kHz processing.

Check the manual that came with your DVD player to confirm what it can output and for more information on

48 these formats.

En

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Image 48
Pioneer VSA-AX10 operating instructions Switching ANALOG/DIGITAL Signal Input, Press the Signal Select button on SUB screen