System Limitations

“TOC Reading” appears in the display for a long time

Regardless of the disc, “TOC Reading” appears in the display of DECK B longer than in that of DECK A. This is because, DECK B is a CD-R/RW writer and reads various version information while setting optimum recording condition.

Limitations when recording over an existing track

The correct remaining recording time may not be displayed.

The remaining recording time may be inaccurately displayed relative to the total recorded time.

You can record up to 99 tracks.

Note

When you turn on the unit, you will hear some mechanical noise from the unit. This is not a malfunction.

Troubleshooting

If you experience any of the following difficulties while using the unit, use this troubleshooting guide to help you remedy the problem.

DECK A (the CD player section)

The player does not start playing.

Insert a disc.

Place the disc properly.

Clean the disc (page 4).

Place the disc with the label side up.

Moisture condensation has formed inside the unit. Take the disc out and leave the unit turned on for about an hour until the moisture evaporates (page 4).

Press POWER to turn the unit on.

DECK A (MP3 playback)

MP3 files cannot be played back.

You cannot play MP3 files on DECK B.

Recording was not performed according to the ISO 9660 level 1 or level 2 format, or the Joliet or Romeo in the expansion format.

The file extension “.MP3” is not added to the file name.

Files are not stored in MP3 format.

MP3 files take longer to play back than others.

The following discs take a longer time to start playback.

a disc recorded with complicated tree structure.

a disc recorded in Multi Session.

a disc to which data can be added (non- finalized disc).

38