The USB device is not recognized.
Turn off the system and reconnect the USB device, then turn on the system.
Connect the supported USB device (Refer to “Compatible USB devices” (supplement)).
The USB device does not work properly. Refer to the operating instructions supplied with the USB device for how to deal with this problem. If the problem persists, contact your nearest Sony dealer.
“Data error” appears on the display when playing an USB device.
The audio track/JPEG image file you want to play is broken.
The JPEG image file format does not conform to DCF.
The JPEG image file has the extension “.jpg” or “.jpeg”, but is not in JPEG format.
Play does not start.
Turn off the system and reconnect the USB device, then turn on the system.
Connect the supported USB device (Refer to “Compatible USB devices” (supplement)).
Press (or on the unit) to start play.
Play does not start from the first track.
Set the play mode to Normal Play mode.
Tracks or files cannot be played back.
The MP3 audio track does not have the extension “.mp3”.
The WMA audio track does not have the extension “.wma”.
The AAC audio track does not have the extension “.m4a”.
The audio track is not stored in MP3/ WMA/AAC format.
The JPEG image file does not have the extension “.jpg” or “.jpeg”.
The JPEG image file is larger than 3,072 (width) × 2,048 (height) in normal mode, or more than 2,000,000 pixels in Progressive JPEG mode which is mainly used on the Internet website.
JPEG image files with a high width to length ratio cannot be played back.
Check the “MODE (MUSIC, IMAGE)” setting (page 71, 72).
USB device formatted with file systems other than FAT12, FAT16 or FAT32 are unsupported.*
The MP3 audio tracks in format other than MPEG 1 Audio Layer 3 cannot be played back.
A WMA audio track that is the WMA DRM, WMA Lossless, or WMA PRO format cannot be played back.
An AAC audio track that is the AAC DRM or AAC Lossless format cannot be played back.
AAC audio tracks encoded at 96 kHz cannot be played back.
Information Additional
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