RECORDING

Recording adjustments and other operations are performed from the recording components. Refer to the operation instructions for those components.

2

VOLUME

INPUT

STANDBY /ON

 

 

 

PRESET/

PRESET

 

TUNING

 

 

 

 

A/B/C/D/E

TUNING

/TUNING FM/AM

MEMORY

MODE

 

PROGRAM

 

 

TUNER

 

 

 

 

 

 

SPEAKERS

MULTI CH INPUT MODE

 

 

MAN'L/AUTO FM

AUTO/MAN'L MONO

TONE CONTROL

 

A

B

INPUT

 

 

STRAIGHT

 

 

DSP

 

 

 

 

 

EFFECT

 

 

 

 

SILENT

 

 

VIDEO AUX

 

(U.S.A. model)

1

1Turn on the power of this unit and all connected components.

2Select the source component you want to record from.

INPUT

PHONO

TUNER

CD

MULTI CH IN

 

V-AUX

CBL/SAT

MD/TAPE

CD-R

 

or

 

 

 

 

DTV

VCR 1

DVR/VCR2

DVD

Front panel

Remote control

3Start playback (or select a broadcast station) on the source component.

4Start recording on the recording component.

Notes

Do a test recording before you start an actual recording.

When this unit is set in the standby mode, you cannot record between other components connected to this unit.

The setting of TONE CONTROL, VOLUME, “Speaker level” (page 50) and programs does not affect the recorded material.

A source connected to the MULTI CH INPUT jacks of this unit cannot be recorded.

S-video and composite video signals pass independently through this unit’s video circuits. Therefore, when recording or dubbing video signals, if your video source component is connected to provide only an S-video (or only a composite video) signal, you can record only an S-video (or only a composite video) signal to your VCR.

A given input source is not output on the same REC OUT channel. (For example, the signal input from VCR 1 IN is not output on VCR 1 OUT.)

Check the copyright laws in your country to record from records, CDs, radio, etc. Recording of copyrighted material may infringe copyright laws.

If you playback a video source that uses scrambled or encoded signals to prevent it from being dubbed, the picture itself may be disturbed due to those signals.

Special considerations when recording

DTS software

The DTS signal is a digital bit stream. Attempting to digitally record the DTS bit stream will result in noise being recorded. Therefore, if you want to use this unit to record sources that have DTS signals recorded on them, the following considerations and adjustments need to be made.

For LDs, DVDs and CDs encoded with DTS, when your player is compatible with the DTS format, follow its operation instruction to make a setting so that the analog signal will be output from the player.

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