Nikon Flat Panel Television 737 Series User Manual

®
DLP HIGH-DEFINITION TELEVISION  
MODELS  
C9 Series  
737 Series  
837 Series  
OWNER’S GUIDE  
Guidelines for setting up and using your new widescreen TV start on page 7.  
For questions:  
-
-
-
E-mail us at [email protected].  
Call Consumer Relations at 800-332-2119.  
For information on System Reset, please see the back cover.  
To order replacement or additional remote controls or lamp cartridges, visit our website at  
837 Series. IR emitter cables for NetCommand home-theater control are available for  
purchase from Mitsubishi. Call 800-553-7278 and request either part number 242D483020  
(two-ended cable) or part number 299P254020 (four-ended cable).  
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Contents  
4 TV Menus  
Important Information About Your TV  
Main Menu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32  
Menu Navigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32  
Adjust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33  
Captions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37  
Initial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38  
Inputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40  
Lock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42  
Installation and Operating Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4  
Important Safety Instructions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5  
Special Features of Your TV. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6  
1 Basic Setup and Operation  
Package Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7  
Before You Begin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7  
First-Time Power-On. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7  
TV Controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8  
Setting Up TV Inputs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10  
Basic TV Operation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12  
5 NetCommand IR Control  
About NetCommand IR Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45  
IR Emitter Placement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46  
Initial NetCommand Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47  
Operating NetCommand-Controlled Devices . . . 48  
2 TV Connections  
Before You Begin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14  
Inputs and Outputs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15  
Y Pb Pr Component Video Device . . . . . . . . . . . 17  
6 NetCommand IR Control of an A/V Receiver  
Controlling an A/V Receiver after  
NetCommand Setup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51  
Setting Up A/V Receiver Control  
H
DMI Device . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17  
DVI Video Device . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18  
Composite Video Device. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18  
Antenna or Cable TV Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18  
VCR or DVD Recorder to an Antenna or  
Power and Volume . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52  
Automatic Audio or Audio/Video Switching . . 53  
Appendices  
Wall Outlet Cable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19  
VCR or DVD Recorder to a Cable Box . . . . . . . . 19  
A/V Receiver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20  
A/V Receiver with HDMI Output. . . . . . . . . . . . . 20  
Appendix A: Bypassing the Parental Lock . . . . . 57  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control . 59  
Appendix C: HDMI Control of CEC Devices . . . . 66  
Appendix D: TV Care  
Lamp-Cartridge Replacement and Cleaning . 69  
Cleaning Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . 71  
Care of the Remote Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72  
3 Using TV Features  
Selecting an Input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21  
Sleep Timer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21  
ChannelView Channel Listings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22  
Redirecting Audio Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22  
Controlling A/V Receiver Sound Volume . . . . . . . 22  
Status Display . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23  
TV Signals and Display Formats. . . . . . . . . . . . . 24  
3D Video . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25  
Using the TV with a Personal Computer . . . . . . . 26  
Camera Images and Music Files . . . . . . . . . . . . 28  
Introduction to Home-Theater Control . . . . . . . . 31  
Trademark and License Information . . . . . . . . . . 79  
Mitsubishi TV Software. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80  
Warranty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81  
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83  
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4
Important Information About Your TV  
Internal Fans  
For Your Records  
Internal cooling fans maintain proper operating tem-  
peratures inside the TV. It is normal to hear the fans  
when you first turn on the TV, during quiet scenes  
while viewing the TV, and for a short time after shutting  
off the TV. You may notice louder fan noise about 30  
seconds after shutting off the TV and while using the  
Bright Lamp Mode.  
Record the model number, serial number, and  
purchase date of your TV. The model and serial  
numbers are on the back of the TV. Refer to this  
page when requesting assistance with the TV.  
MODEL NUMBER  
SERIAL NUMBER  
PURCHASE DATE  
RETAILER NAME  
LOCATION  
Lamp Replacement  
For lamp-replacement instructions, see Appendix D.  
To Order a Replacement Lamp Under Warranty  
Call (800) 553-7278. Please have model number, serial  
number, and TV purchase date available.  
Important: All lamps replaced under warranty  
must be returned to Mitsubishi where they will be  
inspected for defect verification.  
Installation and Operating Notes  
Custom cabinet installation must allow for proper  
air circulation around the television.  
To Purchase a Replacement Lamp After Warranty  
553-7278. Order new lamp part number 915B403001  
NOTE TO CATV SYSTEM INSTALLER: THIS REMINDER  
IS PROVIDED TO CALL THE CATV SYSTEM INSTALLER’S  
ATTENTION TO ARTICLE 820-40 OF THE NEC THAT PRO-  
VIDES GUIDELINES FOR THE PROPER GROUNDING AND,  
IN PARTICULAR, SPECIFIES THAT THE CABLE GROUND  
SHALL BE CONNECTED TO THE GROUNDING SYSTEM OF  
THE BUILDING, AS CLOSE TO THE POINT OF CABLE ENTRY  
AS PRACTICAL.  
TV Software  
Do not attempt to update the software of this TV with  
software or USB drives not provided by or authorized  
by Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America, Inc. Non-  
authorized software may damage the TV and will not be  
covered by the warranty.  
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5
Important Safety Instructions  
Please read the following safeguards for your TV and  
retain for future reference. Always follow all warnings  
and instructions marked on the television.  
E XAMP LE OF ANTE NNA G R OUNDING  
ANTE NNA  
LE AD IN WIR E  
1) Read these instructions.  
2) Keep these instructions.  
3) Heed all warnings.  
G R OUND C LAMP  
ANTE NNA  
DIS C HAR G E UNIT  
(NE C AR TIC LE 810-20)  
E LE C TR IC  
S E R VIC E  
E QUIP ME NT  
4) Follow all instructions.  
G R OUNDING  
C ONDUC TOR S  
(NE C AR TIC LE 810-21)  
5) Do not use this apparatus near water.  
6) Clean only with dry cloth.  
G R OUND C LAMP S  
7) Do not block any ventilation openings. Install in  
accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions.  
P OWE R S E R VIC E G R OUNDING  
E LE C TR ODE S YS TE M  
NE C — NATIONAL E LE C TR IC AL C ODE  
(NE C AR T 250, P AR T H)  
8) Do not install near any heat sources such as  
radiators, heat registers, stoves, or other apparatus  
(including amplifiers) that produce heat.  
Outdoor Antenna Grounding  
9) Do not defeat the safety purpose of the polarized  
or grounding-type plug. A polarized plug has two  
blades with one wider than the other. A grounding  
type plug has two blades and a third grounding  
prong. The wide blade or the third prong are  
provided for your safety. If the provided plug does  
not fit into your outlet, consult an electrician for  
replacement of the obsolete outlet.  
If an outside antenna or cable system is connected  
to the TV, be sure the antenna or cable system is  
grounded so as to provide some protection against  
voltage surges and built-up static charges.  
Replacement Parts  
When replacement parts are required, be sure the  
service technician has used replacement parts speci-  
fied by the manufacturer or have the same character-  
istics as the original part. Unauthorized substitutions  
may result in fire, electric shock or other hazards.  
10) Protect the power cord from being walked on  
or pinched particularly at plugs, convenience  
receptacles, and the point where they exit from the  
apparatus.  
11) Only use attachments/accessories specified by the  
manufacturer.  
12) Use only with the cart,  
stand, tripod, bracket,  
or table specified  
by the manufacturer,  
or sold with the  
apparatus. When  
a cart is used, use  
caution when moving  
the cart/apparatus  
combination to avoid  
injury from tip-over.  
13) Unplug this apparatus  
during lightning storms or when unused for long  
periods of time.  
14) Refer all servicing to qualified service personnel.  
Servicing is required when the apparatus has been  
damaged in any way, such as power-supply cord or  
plug is damaged, liquid has been spilled or objects  
have fallen into the apparatus, the apparatus has  
been exposed to rain or moisture, does not operate  
normally, or has been dropped.  
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6
Special Features of Your TV  
Your new high-definition widescreen television has  
many special features that make it the perfect center of  
your home entertainment system, including:  
These inputs support HDMI 1.3 Deep Color (up to  
36 bits) and the x.v.Color extended color gamut.  
Used with an adapter, these HDMI inputs also  
accept compatible digital DVI video signals. HDMI  
inputs provide additional high-performance,  
high-definition connections for maximum flexibility  
in your choice of home theater products. The HDMI  
inputs are HDCP copy-protection compatible.  
1080p High-Definition DLP Display System  
Your Mitsubishi HDTV uses Texas Instruments Digital  
Light Processing™ technology for rear-projection TVs  
to create the picture you see on screen. All images are  
displayed at 1080p. The TV uses Plush 1080p® 5G to  
convert lower-resolution signals to 1080p for display.  
The TV can also accept 1080p original signals and  
maintain them at 1080p through all processing until  
displayed.  
Easy Connect Auto Input Sensing  
Easy Connect™ Auto Input Sensing automatically rec-  
ognizes when you plug in a device and prompts you to  
assign a name to it. The TV ignores any unused inputs,  
so the result is an uncluttered menu where you can  
easily find and select connected devices by name.  
3D Ready  
All Mitsubishi 1080p DLP HDTV’s are 3D Ready. This  
feature lets you experience the new 3D technolo-  
gies applied to many recent movies and video games.  
Immerse yourself in your favorite video game, movie, or  
sporting event displayed in 3D.  
Home-Theater Control  
HDMI Control  
Available for all models. HDMI devices with Con-  
sumer Electronics Control (CEC) capabilities may be  
compatible with the TV’s HDMI Control feature. Com-  
patible devices can receive control signals through the  
HDMI connection, allowing the TV’s remote control to  
operate some functions of these devices.  
16:9 Widescreen Picture Format  
Enjoy a full theatrical experience in the comfort of your  
home. View pictures as film directors intended them.  
Digital TV broadcasts, DVDs and newer video game  
consoles support this widescreen format.  
NetCommand with IR Learning  
837 Series. Your Mitsubishi HDTV offers a new level  
of networking that seamlessly integrates selected  
older A/V products with new and future digital prod-  
Integrated HDTV Tuner  
Your widescreen Mitsubishi HDTV has an internal HDTV  
tuner able to receive both over-the-air HDTV broad-  
casts (received via an antenna) and non-scrambled  
digital cable broadcasts, including non-scrambled  
HDTV cable programming.  
®
ucts. NetCommand supports IR (infrared) control of  
products such as VCRs, DVD players, cable boxes, and  
satellite receivers. NetCommand can “learn” remote  
control signals directly from many devices, allowing you  
to create a customized NetCommand-controlled home-  
theater system. The necessary IR emitter cables are  
available for purchase separately from Mitsubishi.  
High-Definition Video Inputs  
Component Video Inputs. Also called Y/Pb/Pr  
inputs, these inputs receive standard analog video  
formats of 480i, 480p, 720p, and 1080i high-defini-  
tion signals. This provides a high level of flexibility  
when connecting DVD players/recorders, cable  
boxes, and satellite receivers.  
ENERGY STAR® Compliance  
This TV meets ENERGY STAR® efficiency standards in  
all operating modes.  
HDMI Inputs. These inputs accept digital 480i,  
480p, 720p, 1080i, and 1080p video signals plus  
PCM digital stereo signals. The HDMI™ inputs can  
also accept a variety of PC signals and resolutions.  
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7
Basic Setup and Operation  
1
Package Contents  
Please take a moment to review the following list of  
items to ensure that you have received everything.  
Before You Begin  
1. Review the important safety, installation, and oper-  
ating information at the beginning of this book.  
2. Choose a location for your TV.  
1. Remote Control  
Allow at least four inches of space on all sides  
of the TV to help prevent overheating. Over-  
heating may cause premature failure of the TV  
as well as shortened lamp life.  
2. Two AA Batteries  
3. Basic Owner’s Guide  
4. HDTV Quick-Setup Guide  
5. Product Registration Card  
Avoid locations where light may reflect off the  
screen.  
ACTIVITY  
See the stand requirements on page 2.  
GUIDE  
MENU  
INFO  
BACK  
3
3. Install the batteries in the remote control.  
5
4. Plug the TV into an AC power outlet.  
1
4
First-Time Power-On  
AA  
AA  
2
1. Confirm that the remote  
control is in TV mode.  
Press the side button  
once to light the mode  
indicator and confirm  
that TV mode is active.  
To change, press the  
side button additional  
times to activate TV  
mode.  
Remote Control Batteries  
1. Remove the remote control back cover.  
TV  
GUIDE  
MENU  
INFO  
BACK  
2. Aim the remote control  
at the TV and press the  
GUIDE  
MENU  
INFO  
BACK  
POWER key  
Welcome screen.  
Wait for the  
.
2. Load the batteries, making sure the polarities  
(+) and (-) are correct. Insert the negative (-)  
end first.  
3. Press if you wish to  
change the menu language  
to Español.  
4. Press to highlight EXIT.  
Press ENTER to clear the  
menu.  
3. Slide the cover back into place.  
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8
1. Basic Setup and Operation  
TV Controls  
Remote Control  
Press to select a TV activity  
and input. See page 21.  
ACTIVITY  
VCR CABL/SAT TV DVD AUDIO  
Control-mode indicator for device  
type to control. Use the side button to  
change.  
GUIDE  
MENU  
ChannelView listings, page 22  
.
TV main menu, page 32  
Powers TV on or off.  
ACTIVITY  
GUIDE  
INFO  
BACK  
TV status (page 23) or TV help.  
Side button sets the control mode  
for the type of device to operate. Set  
mode to TV for normal TV viewing.  
MENU  
INFO  
BACK  
Steps back one menu; clears  
the top menu or Status Display.  
CHANNEL UP  
VOLUME UP  
MUTE  
LAST Goes to the previously tuned channel.  
.
CHANNEL DOWN  
PAGE UP  
VOLUME DOWN  
Record/Playback controls for external devices  
When remote control is programmed, page 59  
HDMI control, page 68  
Selects a channel number or  
menu item.  
ENTER  
837 Series: NetCommand, page 48  
Navigation controls  
PAGE DOWN  
(
PAUSE  
)
Freezes a broadcast TV picture.  
Displays a menu showing addi-  
tional functions for the number  
keys.  
MORE  
Number/letter keys  
For the MORE menu in TV mode,  
see below.  
Channel tuning, page 12  
With remote control programmed  
for other device types, page 59.  
The MORE menu in other modes is  
specific to the device type.  
For CEC-enabled devices, page 66  
Adds a separator when enter-  
ing digital channel numbers.  
Clears some menu entries.  
CANCEL  
The MORE menu in TV mode  
Note: To operate other audio/video  
devices using the TV’s remote  
control:  
CC Closed captions, page 37  
VIDEO Video adjustments, page 35  
AUDIO Audio adjustments, page 36  
See Appendix B, “Programming the Remote  
Control.”  
For HDMI devices compatible with the TV’s  
HDMI Control feature, see Appendix C.  
837 Series  
-
See page 45 for NetCommand IR “Learn-  
ing” of device keys.  
For use of specific keys with NetCom-  
mand-controlled devices, see “Special  
Operation Methods,” page 48.  
SLEEP Sleep Timer, page 21  
FORMAT Picture shape (aspect ratio), page 24  
MORE Clears the MORE menu.  
-
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1. Basic Setup and Operation  
9
TV Controls, continued  
System Reset  
TV Control Panel  
If the TV fails to respond to the remote control, the  
Buttons on the control panel duplicate some keys on  
the remote control.  
control-panel buttons, or will not power on/off, perform  
System Reset. Recent setting changes made before  
using System Reset may be lost.  
Refer to upper labels when no TV menus are dis-  
played.  
To perform System Reset, press and hold the POWER  
button on the control panel for ten seconds.  
Refer to lower labels when using TV menus or after  
activating a special function.  
Panel-Lock Release  
STATUS  
POWER  
To release the Panel Lock from the TV control  
panel, press and hold the ACTIVITY button on the  
control panel for ten seconds. You can release the  
Panel Lock with the TV powered either on or off.  
To activate the Panel Lock, use the Lock menu,  
page 44.  
737 and C9 series.  
Flip open cover to  
use buttons on the  
front panel.  
If You Power Off the TV by Mistake  
1. Press POWER again, within about 60 seconds,  
to have the TV come back on immediately.  
2. If the status indicator starts rapidly blinking  
green (about 60 seconds after you shut off  
power), wait a few moments for the status indi-  
cator to stop blinking and press POWER to turn  
the TV on again.  
Controls on 737 and C9 series TVs. 837 series controls  
are similar and are located next to the STATUS indicator.  
STATUS Light  
Key  
Off  
Steady On  
Slow Blinking  
Fast Blinking  
LED Color TV Condition  
Additional Information  
Normal operation.  
TV is powered off.  
TV is powered on.  
None  
Normal operation.  
Green  
Green  
TV powered off, auto-on TV Timer  
is set.  
Normal operation. TV can be turned on at any time.  
TV just powered off and lamp is  
cooling.  
LED starts to blink 60 seconds after turning off TV. TV can be  
turned back on before blinking starts or after blinking stops, but  
not while the indicator is blinking. Normal operation.  
Green  
Yellow  
1. Lamp failure  
Replace the lamp. See “Lamp-Cartridge Replacement and  
Cleaning” on page 69.  
2. No lamp installed.  
Lamp access door is open or not  
secure.  
TV will not operate until lamp access door is secured. See  
“Lamp-Cartridge Replacement and Cleaning” on page 69.  
Red  
Red  
TV may require service.  
Turn off the TV and unplug the set from the AC power source.  
Wait one minute and then plug the set back in. See Appendix E.  
If the red LED is still on, contact your dealer or a Mitsubishi  
Authorized Service Center. Go to www.mitsubishi-tv.com or call  
1-800-332-2119 to receive Authorized Service Center information.  
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10  
1. Basic Setup and Operation  
Setting Up TV Inputs  
Using the ANT (Antenna) Input  
Setting Up Other Inputs  
If using an antenna or direct cable service (no cable  
box), connect the incoming coaxial cable to the TV’s  
ANT input. Refer to page 18.  
1. Connect your devices to the TV, making note of  
which TV input jack is used for each device. See  
“TV Connections,” page 14, for recommendations.  
You must save channels to memory with a channel scan  
to enable reception of all available high-definition and  
standard-definition digital channels. The channel scan  
will search for channels available locally. If you skip this  
step, the TV will receive only analog channels.  
2. Power on the devices to ensure detection.  
3. Power on the TV.  
The TV will display the New Device Found screen  
for each new connection it detects Learn more  
about Auto Input/Auto Output Sensing on the  
opposite page.  
Memorizing Channels with Channel Scan  
For the ANT input  
4. Select the device type if the device is not recog-  
nized automatically.  
To start channel memorization  
1. Power on the TV.  
2. Press MENU and open the Initial > Channel menu.  
Start channel memorization from the Initial > Channel  
menu.  
3. Press ENTER to enter the menu.  
4. Select Ant Air if connected to an  
over-the-air antenna. Select Ant  
Cable for direct cable.  
5. Highlight Scan and press ENTER  
.
Channel memorization may take up  
to 15 minutes to complete.  
Sample New Device  
Found screen.  
To stop channel memorization before completion,  
press CANCEL  
.
Important Note for NetCommand IR Users  
837 Series. Be sure to select the correct device  
type here. Although you can change the device type  
later in the Inputs > Name menu, any “learned” Net-  
Command IR codes will be erased when you make  
the change.  
Use the Initial > Channel > Edit menu (page 39) for  
additional channel options, such as adding or deleting  
channels from memory.  
5. 837 Series. You can perform NetCommand IR  
“learning” after selecting the device type or at a  
later time when convenient. To perform now, high-  
light NetCommand and press ENTER. See “Initial  
NetCommand Setup,” page 47 or “Setting Up A/V  
Receiver Control,” page 52.  
6. Press BACK to close the New Device Found screen.  
The TV will then display the New Device Found  
screen for the next connection it finds.  
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1. Basic Setup and Operation  
11  
Setting Up TV Inputs, continued  
-
For an HDMI A/V receiver, select AVR from  
the list of device types if the A/V receiver is  
not recognized automatically.  
About Auto Input Sensing/  
Auto Output Sensing  
This TV’s Easy Connect™ Auto Input Sensing feature  
detects most connections automatically.  
HDMI CEC Devices Compatible with the TV’s  
HDMI Control Feature. Compatible CEC-  
enabled HDMI devices are often recognized auto-  
matically by the TV. HDMI Control may allow you  
to control some functions of a CEC-enabled device.  
See Appendix C, “HDMI Control of CEC Devices.”  
Auto Input/Auto Output Sensing for Most Devices  
When you first connect a device, the TV will:  
a. Detect the connected device and automati-  
cally switch to it.  
b. Prompt you to identify the device type.  
c. 837 Series. Prompt you to perform NetCom-  
mand set-up for the device, if available.  
d. Repeat these steps for any other newly  
detected devices.  
Which Jacks Trigger Auto Sensing?  
TV Jacks and  
Auto Sensing  
New Device Found screen for a device with HDMI  
control enabled. Select On to enable the TV’s CEC  
control of the device. In some cases, as in the  
example above, you will also be prompted to select a  
device name.  
Y/VIDEO (detected as  
9
composite video)  
Y/VIDEO plus Pb (detected  
as component video)  
9
Tips on Auto Sensing  
HDMI  
9
Choose a different name for each input.  
The antenna input (ANT) is never detected,  
although you can turn off the unused antenna  
input in the Inputs > Name menu.  
USB (837 series)  
9
DIGITAL AUDIO OUTPUT  
(orange jack)  
9
Change the device type displayed in the Activity  
menu by using the Inputs > Name menu (page  
40).  
837 series. Any “learned” NetCommand IR  
codes will be erased if you change the device  
type in the Inputs > Name menu.  
AVR AUDIO OUTPUT  
red jack)  
9
(
ANT (Antenna)  
9
IR NetCommand Output  
(837 series)  
9
Reactivating Auto Input Sensing  
for an HDMI Input  
The TV cannot detect an HDMI device when  
the device is powered off. Detection will  
occur when the device is next powered on.  
When you disconnect an HDMI device, Auto Input  
Sensing is disabled until you perform these steps.  
1. Disconnect the HDMI device.  
When You First Connect a Device  
2. Delete the removed HDMI device in the Inputs >  
Name menu (see “Removing an HDMI Device,”  
page 68).  
Most Device Types. Select the device type from  
the on-screen list. The device type you select here  
will appear as a device icon in the Activity menu.  
3. Connect the new device and the New Device  
A/V Receiver  
Found screen will display.  
-
The TV can detect audio connections on the  
DIGITAL AUDIO OUTPUT jack and the right (red)  
AVR AUDIO OUTPUT jack.  
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12  
1. Basic Setup and Operation  
Basic TV Operation  
Selecting an Input to Watch  
Watching DVDs or Videos  
TV Connected to a DVD Player, DVR, or VCR  
1. Press ACTIVITY  
.
Press ACTIVITY and select a movie source from the  
Activity menu. If you named devices during Auto Input  
Sensing, select the input from the Watch Movie group.  
2. Press  
3. Press ENTER to switch to the input.  
and to highlight an input.  
Watching Broadcast TV  
TV Connected to an Antenna, Direct Cable, Cable  
Box, Set-Top Box, or Satellite Receiver  
1. Select an input to watch from the Activity menu’s  
Watch TV group.  
Note: For more about the Activity menu, see page 21.  
Activity menu, DVD input selected  
Activity menu, antenna input selected  
2. Tune to a channel.  
Enter the channel number using the number  
keys on the remote control and press ENTER  
.
For a two-part digital channel, such as 3-1,  
TV Tips  
press  
3
1
to enter a dash (separator).  
CANCEL  
Press CHANNEL UP/CHANNEL DN to change chan-  
nels one channel at a time.  
Turning the TV On or Off  
Point the remote control at the front of the TV  
and press the POWER button.  
Press the POWER button on the TV control  
panel.  
Press  
(LAST) to switch back to the previ-  
ously tuned channel.  
Antenna or Direct Cable Only. Press GUIDE to  
display ChannelView channel listings, highlight  
a channel number, and press ENTER to tune.  
If You Turn Off the TV by Mistake  
Press POWER again, within about 60 seconds,  
to have the TV come back on immediately.  
If the status indicator starts rapidly blinking  
green (about 60 seconds after you shut off  
power), wait a few moments for the status indi-  
cator to stop blinking and press POWER to turn  
the TV on again.  
Controlling Sound Volume  
Press VOLUME UP/VOLUME DN to adjust the sound  
level.  
See also “Controlling A/V Receiver Sound  
Volume” on page 22.  
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1. Basic Setup and Operation  
13  
Basic TV Operation, continued  
Making Picture Adjustments  
Other TV Features  
Activate Audio Lock to control your sound system  
with the TV’s remote control left in TV mode. See  
page 60.  
1. To get the best picture under different viewing con-  
ditions, set the Picture Mode before changing other  
video settings. See page 35 for more.  
To set the TV Clock see page 38. Set the TV  
Clock if you plan to use the TV Timer (page 38) or  
ChannelView (page 22) features.  
a. Press MENU and go to the Adjust > Picture >  
Picture Mode menu.  
b. Make one of these selections:  
To set parental controls, see the Lock menu, page  
42.  
Name  
When to Use  
Brilliant  
Game  
Bright  
Natural  
Under bright light  
To change the input names that appear in the  
Activity menu, see Inputs > Name options, page  
40.  
With gaming consoles  
For most daytime viewing  
For most nighttime viewing  
3D Video. See page 25.  
c. Press MENU to clear the menu.  
To program the remote control to operate other  
A/V devices, see Appendix B, “Programming the  
Remote Control,” page 59.  
2. Press MORE  
.
3. Press  
8
(VIDEO).  
To control compatible devices using HDMI CEC  
control, see Appendix C, “HDMI Control of CEC  
Devices,” page 66.  
4. Press  
to display the name of the adjustment  
you want.  
5. Press  
to make the adjustment.  
837 Series. To view still and moving digital camera  
images on the TV, see “Camera Images and Music  
Files,” page 28.  
Additional picture adjustments are described on pages  
34 and 35.  
837 Series. To control A/V devices with NetCom-  
mand, see chapter 5, “NetCommand IR Control for  
Most Devices” on (page 45).  
Audio Settings  
Changing the Audio Output  
To switch audio output from the internal TV speakers to  
a connected external sound system or headphones:  
1. Press MORE  
.
Other Information  
2. Press  
9
(AUDIO).  
TV Care  
3. Press  
until the Speakers option is displayed.  
The Speakers option will display only if a connec-  
tion has been detected on one of the TV’s audio  
outputs.  
Lamp Cartridge. When the lamp cartridge needs  
replacement, replace the lamp yourself and save  
the cost of a service call. See Appendix D for  
instructions.  
4. Press to switch between TV and either AV  
Receiver or Headphones.  
General Cleaning. See “Cleaning Recommenda-  
tions,” page 71.  
Changing Audio Settings  
Assistance  
1. Press MORE  
.
For troubleshooting, service, and product support,  
see Appendix E, page 72.  
2. Press (AUDIO).  
9
3. Press  
to display the name of the adjustment  
For warranty information, see the TV warranty on  
page 81.  
you want.  
4. Press  
to change the setting.  
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14  
TV Connections  
2
Before You Begin  
Surround Sound  
Auto Input Sensing  
For best surround sound audio quality, route audio-  
signal cables or HDMI cables from the source device  
directly to your A/V receiver or sound system.  
The TV’s Auto Input Sensing feature automatically rec-  
ognizes most connections and prompts you to identify  
the type of device connected. See page 11 for more on  
Auto Input Sensing.  
IMPORTANT  
Connection Types  
Accessory items such as cables, adapters,  
splitters, or combiners required for TV  
connections are not supplied with the TV.  
These items are available at most electronics  
stores.  
Use the connection types available on your input  
devices that will give the best video quality. For  
example, choose HDMI over component video, and  
choose component video over composite video.  
Picture Quality  
For best picture quality, route signals directly from the  
input device to the TV whenever possible.  
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2. TV Connections  
15  
Inputs and Outputs  
Main Connection Panel  
RS-232C control jack  
offered on 837 series.  
DVI/PC INPUT  
ANT  
(page 18)  
1
6
(page 18)  
10  
RS-232C  
DVI/PC INPUT  
ANT  
AUDIO  
L
R
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pr  
Pb  
HDMI  
2
R
1
3
3D GLASSES  
EMITTER  
5
(page 25)  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pr  
(480i / 480p / 720p / 1080i)  
Pb  
R
L
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
R
AUDIO  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
2
8
4
3
9
7
Y Pb Pr  
(component  
video, page 17)  
IRNetCommand Output  
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
VIDEO  
(composite  
video, page 19)  
HDMI  
(page 17)  
(page 46)  
Offered on 837 series.  
(page 20) (page 20)  
Convenience Inputs  
A readily accessible set of jacks is provided for a camcorder, game, or  
other audio/video device.  
Using an Audio-Only Device  
837 Series. A fourth HDMI input is provided. If you connect a DVI  
device to the HDMI input, use the nearby audio jacks to send sound  
Keep an unused RCA-style con-  
nector in the Y/VIDEO jack while  
using an audio-only device.  
from the device to the TV.  
USB port and  
HDMI 4 offered  
on 837 series.  
Unused  
RCA-style plug  
Y/VIDEO  
L-AUDIO-R  
(plug in first)  
INPUT 3  
Pr  
Pb  
Y/ VIDEO  
L
R
AUDIO  
USB  
HDMI 4  
1.  
2.  
3
Audio-only  
device  
11  
2
Y Pb Pr  
(component  
video, page 17)  
4
USB  
(page 28)  
HDMI  
(page 17)  
VIDEO  
(composite video,  
page 19)  
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16  
2. TV Connections  
Inputs and Outputs, continued  
3. Y Pb Pr (Component Video)  
Connect devices with component video outputs to this  
1. ANT (Antenna)  
Connect your main antenna or direct cable service (no  
cable box) to ANT. The ANT input can receive digital  
and analog over-the-air channels from a VHF/UHF  
antenna or non-scrambled digital/analog cable source.  
jack. Use the adjacent AUDIO R and  
L
jacks if you wish  
to send audio to the TV.  
4. VIDEO (Composite Video)  
2. HDMI™ Inputs (High-Definition  
Multimedia Interface)  
The HDMI inputs support uncompressed standard and  
high-definition digital video formats and PCM digital  
stereo audio.  
Connect a VCR, DVD player, standard satellite receiver,  
or other A/V device to the TV. Use the adjacent AUDIO  
R
and  
L
inputs if you wish to send audio to the TV.  
5. 3D GLASSES EMITTER  
Use this jack for the special IR emitter supplied with 3D  
glasses. The emitter will send a signal that synchronizes  
your 3D glasses with the screen display. See page 25  
Mitsubishi recommends you use category 2 HDMI  
cables, also called high-speed HDMI cables, to connect  
HDMI 1.3 source devices. High-speed category 2 cables  
bring you the full benefits of Deep Color and x.v.Color.  
6. DVI/PC INPUT AUDIO  
When connecting a DVI device to one of the TV’s HDMI  
inputs, use these jacks for left and right analog audio.  
These HDMI inputs can also accept digital DVI video  
signals. To connect a device’s DVI output to the TV’s  
HDMI input, use an HDMI-to-DVI adapter or cable plus  
analog audio cables. Connect the analog audio cables to  
the DVI/PC INPUT AUDIO jacks on the TV to receive left  
and right stereo audio from your DVI device.  
7. AVR AUDIO OUTPUT  
Use AVR AUDIO OUTPUT to send analog audio of the  
current program to an analog A/V surround sound  
receiver or stereo system. Digital audio from digital  
channels and HDMI devices is converted to analog  
audio by the TV for output on this jack. This is the only  
audio connection needed to the TV if using an analog  
A/V receiver or stereo system.  
Use the HDMI inputs to connect to CEA-861 HDMI com-  
pliant devices such as a high-definition receiver or DVD  
player. These inputs support 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i,  
and 1080p video formats.  
The TV’s HDMI inputs are compatible with many DVI-D  
and HDMI computer video signals.  
Headphones. The audio right (red) jack can also be  
used for headphones that accept standard line level  
audio signals.  
These inputs are HDCP (High-Bandwidth Digital Copy  
Protection) compliant.  
8. DIGITAL AUDIO OUTPUT  
HDMI Cable Categories  
This output sends Dolby Digital or PCM digital audio  
to your digital A/V surround sound receiver. Incoming  
analog audio is converted by the TV to PCM digital audio.  
If you have a digital A/V receiver, in most cases this is the  
only audio connection needed between the TV and your  
A/V receiver.  
HDMI cables are available as Category 1 and Cat-  
egory 2 types.  
Category 2 Cables (also called high-speed  
HDMI cables). Newer, HDMI 1.3-compliant DVD  
players, video games, and set-top boxes require  
Category 2 cables, suitable for clock frequen-  
cies up to 340 MHz or data rates of up to 10.2  
gigabits per second. Use category 2 cables for  
high-speed 1080p HD signals carrying extended  
color encodings (i.e., 30 or more bits, also called  
Deep Color). Category 2 cables are also suitable  
for standard HDTV signals.  
9. IR–NetCommand Output  
837 Series. Connect IR emitters to this jack to send  
control signals to external IR remote-controlled devices.  
10. RS-232C  
837 Series. Use the RS-232C interface to receive  
control signals from compatible home-theater control  
control signals for this interface.  
Category 1 Cables (also called standard HDMI  
cables). Category 1 cables may be unmarked.  
They are suitable for standard HDTV 720p,  
1080i, and 1080p signals with 8-bit color depth.  
Use category 1 cables for clock frequencies up  
to 74.25 MHz or data rates of up to 2.23 gigabits  
per second.  
11. USB (837 Series)  
The TV can read JPEG photo files and mp3 or wma music  
files from a USB device connected to the USB port.  
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2. TV Connections  
17  
HDMI Device  
Y Pb Pr Component Video Device  
HDTV Cable Box, Satellite Receiver, DVD/  
Blu-ray Player  
HDTV Cable Box, Satellite Receiver, DVD/  
Blu-ray Player  
Required: HDMI-to-HDMI cable.  
If your cable box or satellite receiver has an HDMI  
output, use the connections for HDMI devices  
described on this page.  
Connect an HDMI cable from the TV back panel to the  
HDMI device output. HDMI devices provide video and  
audio through the single cable.  
Required:  
Mitsubishi recommends you use category 2 (high-  
speed) HDMI cables to connect HDMI 1.3 source  
devices. High-speed category 2 cables bring you the  
full benefits of Deep Color and x.v.Color. See “HDMI  
Cable Categories” on the opposite page for more on  
HDMI cable types.  
RCA-type component video cables  
Left/right analog audio cables.  
Note: To hear digital surround sound, connect the digital  
audio output from the device directly to your digital  
A/V receiver.  
TV main  
R
Y/ VIDEO  
Pr  
Pb  
L
R
AUDIO –  
panel  
RS-232C  
DVI/PC INPUT  
AUDIO  
R
L
L
DVI/PC INPUT  
AUDIO L  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
ANT  
R
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
R
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
HDMI  
2
R
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
1
3
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
R
AUDIO  
L
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
R
IR-NetCmand  
Output  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
R
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
R
L
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
AUDIO  
TV main panel  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
Component  
video cables  
Audio  
cables  
R
L
Incoming from  
cable service or  
satellite dish  
AUDIO  
HDMI-to-HDMI  
cable  
Any HDMI  
device  
L
Y
Pb  
Pr  
R
AUDIO  
CABLE IN or  
SATELLITE IN  
Component video  
device  
IMPORTANT  
HDMI and Audio Signals  
Digital Surround Sound: The TV’s HDMI inputs  
can receive digital stereo audio signals only. To  
hear digital surround sound from an HDMI device,  
connect the device’s HDMI or digital audio output  
directly to your A/V receiver. See the Owner’s  
Guides for those devices for instructions.  
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18  
2. TV Connections  
DVI Video Device  
Antenna or Cable TV Service  
Connect the incoming cable to the TV’s ANT input.  
Cable Box, Satellite Receiver, DVD Player  
Connect DVI devices (digital only) to the TV’s HDMI  
input jacks.  
VHF  
antenna  
Required:  
Cable TV  
service  
Analog stereo audio cables  
DVI-to-HDMI cable or DVI/HDMI adapter and HDMI  
cable  
UHF  
antenna  
If you are using a DVI/HDMI adapter, it is important to  
connect the adapter to the DVI device for best perfor-  
mance.  
Some devices require connection to an analog input  
first in order to view on-screen menus and to select DVI  
as the ouput. Please review your equipment instruc-  
tions for DVI connectivity and compatibility.  
300-ohm-to75-  
ohm combiner  
(side view)  
ANT  
Note: The HDMI connection supports copy protection  
(HDCP).  
or  
or  
DVI/PC INPUT  
AUDIO L  
ANT  
R
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
HDMI  
2
ANT  
R
1
3
3D  
Pr  
Older  
cable  
box  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
EO  
Pb  
Pr  
R
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
UDIO  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
TV main  
panel  
OUT  
IN  
Pr  
R
p
/
1080i)  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
TV main panel  
Not recommeded. Other  
connection types provide  
better quality audio and video.  
DVI-to-HDMI  
cable  
Audio cables  
R
L
DVI OUT  
Digital DVI  
device  
AUDIO  
RS-232C  
TV main panel  
Composite Video Device  
DVI/PC INPUT  
ANT  
AUDIO  
L
R
L
VR  
O  
Y/ VIDEO  
3D  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
ASSES  
MITTER  
VCR or other device with composite video  
output  
3
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
R
L
R
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
AUDIO  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
Required:  
Composite video cable (usually yellow)  
Analog stereo audio cables.  
Composite  
video cable  
Audio  
cables  
VCR or other  
device with  
composite  
L
R
COMPOSITE  
VIDEO OUT  
AUDIO OUT  
video output  
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2. TV Connections  
19  
VCR or DVD Recorder to a Cable Box  
Required:  
VCR or DVD Recorder to an  
Antenna or Wall Outlet Cable  
Two-way RF splitter  
Three coaxial cables  
Required:  
Right and left audio cables  
Composite or component video cables  
Video and audio cables required to connect the TV  
to the cable box.  
Two-way RF splitter  
Two coaxial cables  
Right and left analog audio cables  
Component or composite video cables  
Notes: Use composite video if only if component video  
or HDMI are unavailable. For an HDMI connec-  
tion between the TV and recorder, see page 17.  
Note:  
Use composite video only if component  
video or HDMI are unavailable. For an  
HDMI connection between the TV and  
recorder, see page 17.  
When using this connection configuration, it is  
possible to view live cable programs through the  
recording device. For best picture quality always  
view live cable programs directly from the TV input  
connected to the cable box device.  
If your recording device has an analog-only  
tuner, you must use a digital converter box  
to enable recording of digital broadcasts.  
RS-232C  
ANT  
AUDIO  
L
R
TV main panel  
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
DVI/PC INPUT  
AUDIO L  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
ANT  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
R
HDMI  
2
R
1
3
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
HDMI  
R
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
L
R
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720
/
1080i)  
AUDIO  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
DIGTAL  
UDIO  
OUTPUT  
R
L
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720
/
1080i)  
AUDIO  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
Y/ VIDEO  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pr  
Pb  
Y/ VIDEO  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pr  
Pb  
or  
Cable  
Box  
Audio and  
video from  
cable box  
or  
IN  
directly to TV  
OUT  
L
R
ANTENNA  
IN  
COMPOSITE  
VIDEO OUT  
COMPONENT  
VIDEO OUT  
AUDIO OUT  
DVD Recorder or VCR  
L
R
ANTENNA  
IN  
COMPOSITE  
VIDEO OUT  
COMPONENT  
VIDEO OUT  
AUDIO OUT  
DVD Recorder or VCR  
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20  
2. TV Connections  
A/V Receiver  
A/V Receiver with HDMI Output  
Most setups require either a digital audio cable or  
analog stereo audio cables. To send audio from TV  
channels received on the ANT input or devices con-  
nected directly to the TV, you must use one of the  
connections shown below. Usually, only one of these  
connections is required.  
Required: One HDMI-to-HDMI cable  
This option allows you to view content from devices  
connected to an A/V receiver. The A/V receiver can  
send audio and video to the TV over a single HDMI  
cable. You can use an HDMI connection as described  
here in addition to an audio connection from the TV’s  
audio output. The optional audio connection allows you  
to hear, through the A/V receiver, devices connected to  
the TV only, e.g., an antenna on the ANT input.  
The TV makes all audio available in digital and analog  
formats:  
Analog audio coming into the TV is available as  
output in digital stereo format on the DIGITAL  
AUDIO OUTPUT jack.  
You may be able to use the TV’s remote control (in  
TV mode) to operate connected CEC-enabled HDMI  
devices. Experiment with your equipment to determine  
which functions are available to the TV’s remote control.  
See Appendix C, page 66.  
Digital incoming audio is available as analog output  
on the AVR AUDIO OUTPUT L and  
R
jacks.  
837 Series: This setup allows you to use NetCom-  
mand-controlled audio and video switching over the  
HDMI cable. See “Case 3: Automatic Audio and Video  
Switching via HDMI” on page 54.  
TV main panel  
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
R
RS-232C  
DVI/PC INPUT  
ANT  
AUDIO  
L
R
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
HDMI  
R
Pb  
Pr  
R
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
DVI/PC INPUT  
ANT  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
L
TV main panel  
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
HDMI  
2
R
1
3
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
Stereo analog  
cables  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
R
L
R
AUDIO  
Net
ut  
OUTPUT  
Digital coaxial cable  
(for a digital A/V  
receiver)  
(for an analog  
A/V receiver)  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
Optional analog or  
digital audio  
connection  
OPTICAL  
INPUT  
COAXIAL  
INPUT  
A/V receiver  
with HDMI  
output  
L
R
HDMI OUT  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
A/V receiver back panel  
Note:  
VCR  
High-definition  
DVD player  
On rare occasions, an HDMI signal may be  
copy-restricted and cannot be output from  
the TV as a digital signal. To hear these copy-  
protected signals through the A/V receiver, use  
the connection for an analog A/V receiver.  
DVD player  
Cable box  
Check the A/V receiver’s Owner’s Guide for  
information concerning use of the digital input  
and switching between digital sound and  
analog stereo sound from the TV.  
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21  
Using TV Features  
3
Selecting an Input  
The Activity menu lets you switch TV inputs. The inputs are  
organized into groups based on possible ways to use them.  
1. Press the ACTIVITY key.  
2. Use  
to move through groups of TV inputs.  
3. Use  
to select an input.  
4. Press ENTER to switch to the input.  
To change the list of inputs shown in each activity group,  
see Inputs > Activity, page 40.  
To assign or change the names of input icons, use the  
Inputs > Name menu, page 40.  
Sleep Timer  
The Sleep Timer turns the TV off after the length of time you set.  
To set the TV to turn on at a certain time of day, see the Initial > Timer menu on page  
38.  
Setting the Sleep Timer  
1. Press MORE on the remote control. The TV’s MORE menu will display.  
2. Press CANCEL (SLEEP) repeatedly to increase the time in 30-minute increments.  
The maximum is 120 minutes.  
SLEEP  
3. Press BACK or wait five seconds without pressing any keys for the message to dis-  
With the MORE menu  
displayed, press the  
CANCEL key on the  
remote control to  
activate/deactivate the  
Sleep feature.  
appear.  
Viewing or Changing the Sleep Timer  
1. Press MORE  
.
2. Press CANCEL (SLEEP).  
3. Press CANCEL (SLEEP) additional times to change the number of minutes before the  
TV powers off.  
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22  
3. Using TV Features  
ChannelView Channel Listings  
Redirecting Audio Output  
Selecting an Audio Output Device  
1. Press MORE and then (AUDIO).  
9
2. Press to show the Speakers option. The Speak-  
ers option will display only if there is a connection  
on a TV audio output.  
3. Press to select either AV Receiver, Head-  
phones, or TV.  
Disconnecting an Analog A/V Receiver  
When you disconnect an analog A/V receiver, change  
the Speakers setting to TV to hear sound from the TV  
speakers. Change the setting using the remote con-  
trol’s MORE  
Speakers menu.  
>
9
(AUDIO )key or the Adjust > Audio >  
ChannelView. Programs for the tuned channel are  
listed on right side of screen.  
ChannelView™ shows memorized channels on the ANT  
input. It displays channel names and program informa-  
tion for digital channels as sent by broadcasters or your  
local cable service provider (information may be incom-  
Controlling A/V Receiver Sound  
Volume  
Use one of the methods below to control sound volume from  
an A/V receiver.  
plete) No program information is displayed for analog  
.
channels.  
Note: You must set the TV Clock (page 38) to receive  
With a Standard TV Setup  
ChannelView listings for the current channel.  
Recommended Method: Program the TV’s  
remote control for your A/V receiver and enable the  
Audio Lock feature. See page 60.  
Using ChannelView  
Feature  
Instructions  
Program the TV’s remote control for your A/V  
receiver and set the TV remote control’s mode to  
AUDIO. Return the control mode to TV to control the  
TV.  
Receive updates for a  
digital channel.  
1. Tune to the channel.  
2. Press the INFO key.  
Display/hide ChannelView  
listings from the ANT  
input.  
GUIDE  
Use the remote control that came with the A/V  
receiver.  
Scan channels one by one. Hold or  
With HDMI Control (CEC-Enabled HDMI  
A/V Receiver)  
Scan channels quickly.  
Hold PAGE UP/PAGE DN  
Jump to listings for a spe- 1. Enter the channel  
The TV’s remote control may control some functions of  
the A/V receiver. See Appendix C, “HDMI Control of  
CEC Devices,” page 66.  
cific channel.  
number.  
2. Press ENTER  
.
See more of the program  
description for the current  
channel (if available).  
INFO  
With NetCommand IR Control  
837 Series. Set up NetCommand control of the A/V  
receiver’s volume functions in the Inputs > AVR menu.  
The TV’s remote will then control A/V receiver volume.  
See page 52.  
Tune to the highlighted  
channel.  
ENTER  
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3. Using TV Features  
23  
Status Display  
3
4
6
1
Press the INFO key to see  
the on-screen status  
display. The most  
common displays are  
shown here.  
402-101 KABC  
TV-PG DLSV  
Monday Night Football  
St. Louis vs. Tampa Bay, played in Tampa for  
2
5
7
8
Sleep 30 min  
12  
Surround  
13  
Sample information  
from the on-screen  
status display  
English  
Tuesday 9:10 PM  
HD 1080i Standard  
9
10  
11  
14  
ACTIVITY  
GUIDE  
About Channel Numbers  
MENU  
INFO  
BACK  
Channel Numbers for Over-the-Air Reception or  
Reception by Direct Cable  
Note: All signals are automatically converted to  
1080p for display.  
1. Current Input  
Standard-Definition Analog Channels  
2. Audio Indicator. Key:  
Cable Reception  
Channel 3  
TV speakers  
Headphones  
External sound system  
Mute  
Cable  
3
3. Channel number (antenna source only)  
Digital channel includes major and sub-channel  
numbers.  
480i Stretch  
Receiving Standard-Definition  
Analog Signal (480i)  
4. Digital channel name (if broadcast); antenna  
source only.  
Standard-Definition Digital Channels  
5. V-Chip rating  
Antenna source only for digital signal  
Antenna or VIDEO composite jack for analog  
signal  
Over-the-Air  
Antenna Reception  
Main Channel 7  
Sub-Channel 1  
Ant  
7-1 KABC-SD  
6. Program name (if broadcast); digital source only  
7. Program description (if broadcast); digital  
source, antenna only. Press the INFO key additional  
times to see more of the description.  
SD 4:3 Stretch  
Receiving Standard-Definition  
Digital Signal (SD)  
8. Sleep Timer remaining time  
9. Day and time  
High-Definition Digital Channels  
10. Signal type being received  
11. Screen format in use  
Over-the-Air  
Antenna Reception  
Main Channel 7  
Sub-Channel 1  
Ant  
7-1 KABC-HD  
12. Program Audio indicator (antenna source only)  
Digital source: Stereo, Surround, Dual Mono  
Analog source: Stereo, Stereo SAP, SAP  
HD 16:9 Stretch  
13. Available language (digital source, antenna only)  
Receiving High-Definition  
Digital Signal (HD)  
14. Signal-strength indicator (digital source,  
antenna only)  
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24  
3. Using TV Features  
Original  
Signal  
TV Signals and Display Formats  
TV  
Display  
This is a 16:9 widescreen TV suitable for images available  
from HDTV and many DVDs. You can view older-style, squar-  
ish images (4:3 aspect ratio) using one of the display formats  
described on this page. Press the MORE key and then the  
Anamorphic DVD  
Recommended  
Non-anamorphic or SD 4:3  
Standard  
Distorted.  
Not recom-  
mended.  
0
key (FORMAT) to cycle through available display formats.  
Expand  
Zoom  
Recom-  
Distorted; not  
recommended.  
See Note 1.  
mended for  
letterbox. See  
Note 1.  
The TV remembers the format you last used for each input.  
DVD Image Definitions  
Image information may be stated on the DVD case. Some  
DVDs support both of the formats described below.  
Distorted.  
Not recom-  
mended. See  
Note 1.  
Recommended  
for anamorphic  
2.35:1 images.  
See Note 1.  
Anamorphic (or Enhanced for WideScreen TV)  
Indicates DVDs recorded to show widescreen images prop-  
erly on 16:9 TV sets using the TV’s Standard format mode  
Stretch  
Recom-  
mended for  
standard  
broadcasts.  
See Note 1.  
Distorted; not  
recommended.  
See Note 1.  
(recommended)  
.
Non-Anamorphic (or 4:3, 1.33:1, Letter Box, or  
Full Screen)  
Indicates DVDs recorded for viewing on squarish TV  
screens. They may be full screen (4:3 or 1.33:1) which  
crops movies to fit the narrow TV, or letter box, which  
adds black top and bottom bars.  
Stretch  
Plus  
Recom-  
mended for  
standard  
broadcasts.  
See Note 1.  
Distorted; not  
recommended.  
See Note 1.  
Narrow  
See Note 1  
Distorted; not  
recommended.  
See Note 1.  
Signal Definitions  
480i: Older type of interlaced signals from the ANT input,  
composite VIDEO, component Y Pb Pr, or HDMI jacks.  
Note 1: Available for 480i, 480p, and digital SD 4:3 signals only.  
Original Signal Display Formats  
SD 16:9 or  
480p: Progressive-scan DVD signals on component Y Pb  
Pr or HDMI jacks.  
Wide  
Recommended to re-  
HD Digital  
Expand move side bars.  
720p and 1080i: High-definition signals received through  
component Y Pb Pr or HDMI jacks. These signals are  
always 16:9 (widescreen).  
720p, 1080i,  
1080p Signal  
Zoom Recommended to re-  
move bars from the top,  
bottom, and sides.  
1080p: High-definition signals from a PC or Blu-ray player,  
TV Display Formats. Press the MORE key and then  
repeatedly press the key (FORMAT to see the displays  
available for the current program. Press the INFO key to see  
HDMI inputs only.  
0
)
SD 4:3: Standard-definition squarish-screen-format  
signals from digital channels on the ANT input.  
the name of the display format in use.  
SD 16:9: Standard-definition widescreen-format signals  
from digital channels on the ANT input.  
Stretch: Stretches a squarish 4:3 image across the  
screen to display the entire image with less distortion  
than the Standard format.  
HD 16:9: High-definition 16:9 widescreen signals from  
digital channels on the ANT input.  
TV Display Format Definitions  
Stretch Plus: Similar to Stretch, but minimizes distor-  
tion on the sides by expanding the picture to crop off  
Standard: The full-screen format used by HDTV signals.  
Use this format to display anamorphic DVDs with a 1.78:1 or  
1.85:1 aspect ratio. Anamorphic DVDs with a 2.35:1 aspect  
ratio are displayed correctly but with top and bottom black  
bars. Squarish (4:3) images are stretched evenly from side to  
side. Available for all signals.  
portions of the top and bottom. Use  
vertical position of the picture.  
to adjust the  
Narrow: Displays narrow 4:3 images in their original  
shape. Adds black side bars to fill the screen.  
Wide Expand: Enlarges the picture, cropping the image  
on both sides. Removes or reduces black side bars added  
to narrow images converted to 16:9 signals for digital  
broadcast.  
Expand: Enlarges the picture to fill the screen by cropping  
the top and bottom; useful for reducing the letter box top and  
bottom bars of non-anamorphic DVD images.  
Zoom: Enlarges the picture to fill the screen by cropping the  
sides, top, and bottom to eliminate black bars.  
Note: All high-definition channels send widescreen  
(16:9) signals, but not all programming was created for  
the widescreen format. The broadcaster may stretch  
the image or add side bars to fill the widescreen area.  
480i/480p and SD 4:3 signals: Eliminates top and bottom  
bars on anamorphic DVDs with a 2.35:1 aspect ratio.  
720p, 1080i, SD 16:9, and HD signals: Eliminates bars  
added to squarish 4:3 images.  
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3. Using TV Features  
25  
3D Video  
Watching 3D Video  
Note: 3D glasses are required.  
This section provides Instructions for viewing 3D  
video using 3D glasses and the TV’s 3D feature. The  
3D options are found in the Adjust > 3D Mode menu  
described on page 34.  
1. Press ACTIVITY  
.
2. Highlight the icon for the 3D video device and press  
ENTER  
.
Initial Setup  
3. Press MENU and select the Adjust > 3D Mode  
1. Check if your HDMI 3D video source device outputs  
a 1080p 60 Hz signal. This information will be  
needed when you assign an input name in the New  
Device Found screen.  
menu.  
4. Select On. The On setting will be memorized for  
the current input when you exit this menu.  
2. If your 3D glasses came with an emitter box,  
connect the emitter box to the 3D GLASSES  
EMITTER jack. Place the box in front of the TV  
where there is an unobstructed path to the glasses.  
RS-232C  
DVI/PC INPUT  
R
AUDIO L  
ANT  
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
HDMI  
2
R
1
3
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
R
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Use the Adjust > 3D Mode menu to enable 3D video.  
5. Press BACK to close the menu.  
6. If the image does not appear correct (e.g., objects  
appear to be moving in instead of out), open the  
Adjust > 3D Mode menu and set Glasses L-R to  
Reverse.  
3. Power on the TV and the source device.  
4. Connect the source device to the TV’s HDMI input.  
5. When the New Device Found screen displays,  
To Watch Regular (non-3D) Video  
name the input according to the table below.  
The 3D Mode setting is memorized for each input.  
When you want to watch non-3D video on the input  
selected above, open the Adjust > 3D Mode menu and  
set 3D Mode to Off.  
The signal type and choice of name are important  
because the TV will process the video signal  
differently depending on the name you assign.  
If your source device is a Blu-ray disc or game  
console, the signal must be 1080p at 60 Hz.  
Source  
of 3D  
Video  
Assign  
Name  
3D Video Signal  
Computer Recommended: 1080p 60 Hz  
(1920 X 1080). The image will fill  
the TV screen.  
PC  
Important Note About 3D Images  
Other 60-Hz computer video  
signals compatible with the TV  
will display with black bars. See  
“Computer Display Formats” on  
page 27.  
To display 3D images, Mitsubishi Home Theater DLP  
TVs require that source devices support checker-  
board display formats for 3D gaming or 3D cinema  
content. A 3D standard format does not currently  
exist for Blu-ray or DVD prepackaged media. Future  
3D standards may be incompatible with Mitsubishi  
Home Theater DLP TVs. Please visit mitsubishi-tv.  
com for updates and information.  
Any other  
3D video  
source  
To see 3D video, the signal must Any  
be 1080p 60 Hz  
other  
name  
6. Press BACK to close the New Device Found screen.  
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26  
3. Using TV Features  
Using the TV with a Personal Computer  
Connecting a Computer to the TV  
Use one of the connection methods listed below based  
on your computer’s video output.  
TV main  
panel  
ANT  
R
L
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
I
Pr  
HDMI  
2
1
3
AUDIO  
I
P
1080i)  
Computer  
Video Output  
Audio  
Connection  
R
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
Video Connection  
Computer  
with HDMI  
audio and  
video output  
Digital DVI  
DVI-to-HDMI cable Stereo audio  
or an HDMI cable  
with an HDMI-to-  
DVI adapter  
cables  
An HDMI-to-HDMI connection carries all video and  
audio on a single cable.  
Note: If the computer’s audio output  
is a single mini jack, a mini audio-to-  
RCA-male “Y” adapter cable is also  
required.  
DVI/PC INPUT  
AUDIO L  
ANT  
R
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
HDMI  
HDMI-to-HDMI  
cable  
No additional  
audio connec-  
tion is required.  
HDMI  
2
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
R
1
3
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
R
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
AUDIO  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
IMPORTANT  
This TV accepts digital computer signals only.  
TV main panel  
1.  
2.  
1. Connect the computer’s digital signal output to one  
of the TV’s HDMI jacks. See the connection dia-  
grams for the method suited to your equipment.  
2.  
1.  
2. Connect the computer’s audio output using one of  
these options:  
For digital DVI signals, connect analog left/right  
audio to the TV’s DVI/PC INPUT AUDIO jacks.  
For HDMI signals, no additional audio connec-  
tion is required.  
Computer with  
DVI and stereo  
audio outputs  
DVI OUT  
R
L
AUDIO  
A DVI connection from a personal computer requires a  
separate audio connection. A computer connected to  
the TV main connector panel is shown above.  
3. Power on the TV and computer. The TV will detect  
the connection and display the New Device Found  
screen.  
4. In the New Device Found screen, press  
to  
Computer with DVI and  
stereo audio outputs  
highlight PC in the list of device types. It is impor-  
tant to use the name PC so that the TV processes  
the video signal correctly.  
TV convenience inputs  
AUDIO  
INPUT 3  
DVI OUT  
Pr  
Pb  
Y/ VIDEO  
L
R
USB  
HDMI 4  
AUDIO  
L
R
5. Press BACK to close the New Device Found screen.  
HDMI 4  
HDMI-to-DVI cable  
Note: If your computer provides digital audio out-  
put (coaxial or optical), you can connect it  
directly to a digital A/V receiver and bypass  
the TV.  
837 Series: Computer with DVI output connected to  
the convenience panel.  
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3. Using TV Features  
27  
Using the TV with a Personal Computer  
Computer Video Adjustments  
Tip  
1. Power on the computer.  
Set the computer’s screen saver to display a pattern  
after several minutes of inactivity. This acts as a  
reminder that the TV is powered on and the lamp  
is in use. The lamp is in use whenever the TV is  
powered on, even if the screen appears dark.  
2. Select PC from the Activity menu. To do this,  
press ACTIVITY to open the Activity menu, move the  
highlight to the PC icon, and press ENTER.  
3. Working from the computer, change the resolution  
of the computer image. View the computer image  
on the TV and maximize the computer resolution  
while maintaining a suitable aspect ratio for the  
image.  
Computer Display Formats  
4. Perform TV video adjustments. Press  
MORE then press (VIDEO) repeatedly  
8
Press MORE then press  
0
(FORMAT) repeatedly to cycle through the  
to access video-adjustment options.  
The following additional adjustments  
are available for computer video:  
TV displays available for your computer’s video signal.  
Computer Signal  
Original Format  
As Displayed on TV Screen  
Horiz Position (Horizontal Position).  
Manually adjust the horizontal  
position.  
4 X 3  
Standard  
16 X 9  
Zoom  
Standard  
VGA  
Vert Position (Vertical Position).  
640 X 480  
Manually adjust the vertical position.  
5. Press MORE then press (FORMAT)  
0
WVGA  
848 X 480  
repeatedly to find the picture format  
(aspect ratio) best suited to the image.  
See the chart on this page showing  
how different computer resolutions  
can be displayed on the TV.  
SVGA  
800 X 600  
Distortion in Computer Images  
WSVGA  
1064 X 600  
Computer images may show distortion  
when viewed on the TV, e.g., lines that  
should be straight may appear slightly  
curved.  
Original Format  
Standard  
Zoom  
XGA  
1024 X 768  
Image Resolution  
Your Mitsubishi TV can display the resolu-  
tions shown in the chart from standard  
VGA (640 x 480) through 1920 x 1080  
signals at a refresh rate of 60 Hz. The  
resolution of 1920 x 1080 is supported at  
refresh rates of 24, 30, and 60 Hz.  
PC 720p  
1280 X 720  
WXGA  
1360 X 768  
In most cases, the computer will select  
the best resolution match to display on  
the TV. You can override this setting if you  
wish. Refer to your computer operating  
system’s instructions for information on  
changing the screen resolution.  
SXGA  
1280 X 1024  
Original Format  
Standard  
Reduce  
PC 1080p  
1920 X 1080  
You may need to restart the computer for  
changes to take effect.  
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28  
3. Using TV Features  
Camera Images and Music Files  
837 Series TVs Only  
3. To use the USB Media Player menu:  
The TV can read photo or music files from a USB  
device. Photos must be in JPEG format and music  
files must be in mp3 or wma formats. To play  
music files while displaying a photo slide show, see  
“USB Media Setup Menu” on the opposite page.  
Activate any of the  
menu options  
Highlight an icon and press  
ENTER  
.
Display the Activity  
menu.  
Press ACTIVITY. Press again to  
clear.  
Display the main  
menu.  
Press MENU. Press again to  
clear.  
The TV can display files of still or moving images  
from a camera through the Y/VIDEO port.  
Display status for the Press INFO. Press BACK to  
file source. clear.  
The USB Media Player Menu  
4. To resume use of the USB port after switching the  
TV to a different input, press ACTIVITY, choose View  
Photos, and select the USB port.  
Playing a Slide Show or Playlist  
Use these keys while playing a slide show or playlist.  
Displaying the Menu  
Replays the slide show or playlist.  
or  
ENTER  
1. Back up the data on your USB drive before con-  
necting it to the TV. Mitsubishi is not responsible  
for any file damage or data loss.  
Pauses a slide show or playlist.  
2. Connect your USB card reader or USB drive to the  
TV’s USB port.  
Stops a slide show or playlist.  
The USB Media Player menu displays while files  
are being read. Wait until icons appear in the menu  
before continuing.  
Displays the previous or next slide.  
Rotates an image clockwise in 90˚ incre-  
ments.  
GUIDE  
INPUT 3  
Pr  
Pb  
Y/ VIDEO  
L
R
USB  
HDMI 4  
AUDIO  
Displays the USB Media Player menu.  
BACK  
MENU  
Displays the main menu.  
Displays the Activity menu.  
ACTIVITY  
Displays slide name or track name. Press  
BACK to clear.  
INFO  
IMPORTANT  
Always stop playback with  
to a different TV input before disconnecting your  
USB device.  
(STOP) or change  
837 series TVs can read photo and  
music files from the USB port.  
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3. Using TV Features  
29  
Camera Images and Music Files, continued  
Thumbnail and Playlist  
Menus  
USB Media Setup Menu  
Use the USB Media Setup menu set up play of a slide  
show or playlist.  
If JPEG image files and wma/mp3 files are on the  
USB device, choose:  
-
-
-
Slideshow + Music  
Slideshow  
Music only  
JPEG Thumbnail Menu  
Slideshow. Select either Auto or Manual advance  
for the slide show. During manual operation, press  
ENTER to advance to the next slide.  
Use these keys while viewing JPEG thumbnail images  
or the music tracks in a playlist.  
Moves the highlight from item to item.  
Interval. For automatic advance, select the time  
interval for display of each slide. The interval you  
select here is the minimum time between slides;  
actual time may be longer for larger files.  
Rotates a thumbnail clockwise in 90˚  
increments  
GUIDE  
Plays the slide show or playlist starting  
with the highlighted item.  
or  
ENTER  
Frequency. For automatic advance, select the  
number of times (frequency) to play the complete slide  
show and/or playlist: Once, Twice, or Continuous.  
Selects the last item on the current page.  
Press BACK to close the Media Setup menu and  
return to the Media Player menu.  
Selects the first item on the current page.  
Displays the next or previous page of  
Notes on Using the USB Port  
PAGE UP/DN items.  
The TV ignores all commands while reading files. Wait  
for icons to appear in the USB Media Player menu  
before continuing.  
BACK  
MENU  
Displays the USB Media Player menu.  
Displays the main menu.  
Large files or high-capacity storage devices may take a  
long time to display. The screen will be blank while files  
are read.  
ACTIVITY Displays the Activity menu.  
Use only one source device at a time.  
USB Port Compatible Picture Files  
Back up the data on your USB drive before connect-  
ing it to the TV. Mitsubishi is not responsible for any  
file damage or data loss.  
Still images recorded on digital cameras using the  
Exchangeable Image File Format, version 2.1 (EXIF  
2.1) standard for digital still cameras and Design  
Rules for Camera File Systems version 1.0 (DCF 1.0)  
Note: Some manufacturers’ devices may be incompat-  
ible with the TV. If the TV is unable to display your  
photos, you can:  
Some images opened and resaved on a computer  
may not play back or may not display in the thumb-  
nail list. This happens if the files were resaved in an  
incompatible format.  
Transfer files to a different USB device.  
Use your digital camera’s composite video  
output. See page 30.  
Full path file names can be no longer than 50 char-  
acters and must end in a .jpg extension. Only the  
first 20 of the 50 characters will display.  
The TV can read JPEG files as created by the  
camera. If you edit a picture file on a computer  
and resave the image, the TV may be unable to  
read the resaved file.  
Images on storage devices with a capacity of over  
256 MB can take a longer initial time to display.  
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30  
3. Using TV Features  
4. When the New Device Found screen displays,  
Photos and Moving Video  
as Composite Video  
Connect the camera to the TV using a composite video  
cable if:  
assign the name Camcorder.  
5. Press BACK to close the New Device Found screen.  
6. Press ACTIVITY, select Watch Movie > Cam, and  
press ENTER  
.
You are unable to see images using the USB port.  
You wish to view moving video from the camera.  
Control the slide show or movie through the camera as  
the TV’s USB Media Player menu will be unavailable.  
The display resolution will be standard-definition (480i).  
1. Refer to the owner’s manual supplied with the  
camera for instructions needed for this setup.  
2. Set the camera’s output signal type to NTSC and  
put the camera into playback mode.  
7. If viewing photos, advance through the images  
manually or set the camera to advance automati-  
cally.  
3. With the camera still turned on, connect your digital  
camera’s composite video cable (usually yellow) to  
the TV’s Y/VIDEO jack. To hear audio, connect the  
camera’s audio output cable to the AUDIO L jack.  
INPUT 3  
Pr  
Pb  
Y/ VIDEO  
L
R
AUDIO  
USB  
HDMI 4  
Optional  
Audio Cable  
Camera connection using a composite video cable  
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3. Using TV Features  
31  
Introduction to Home-Theater Control  
This TV offers a choice on home-theater-control systems. This summary offers some examples of the control  
methods available using the TV’s remote control. You may wish to use one or more of these methods in your  
home theater after completing Auto Input Sensing.  
Source device connected directly to the TV  
Remote Control Programming (Any Connection Type)  
Program the remote control to operate the A/V device. To control the device, set  
Any Connection Type  
the remote control to the correct mode for the device type. See Appendix B, “Pro-  
gramming the Remote Control.” In the case of an A/V receiver, use the Audio Lock  
feature, page 60.  
A/V  
Device  
TV  
HDMI  
Cable  
CEC-Enabled HDMI Device (HDMI Connection Only)  
See Appendix C, “HDMI Control of CEC Devices,” page 66.  
CEC-Enabled  
A/V Device  
TV  
Any Connection Type  
A/V  
837 Series: NetCommand IR Control (Any Connection Type)  
Set up NetCommand IR control of the device’s keys as desired. See “IR Emitter  
Placement,” page 46, and “Initial NetCommand Setup,” page 47.  
TV  
Device  
Source device connected to an A/V receiver connected to the TV  
CEC-Enabled  
Source Device  
A/V Receiver  
TV  
HDMI  
Cable  
CEC-Enabled HDMI A/V Receiver  
The TV’s remote control may operate some functions of a connected A/V device.  
You can switch to the device by selecting its icon in the TV’s Activity menu. See  
Appendix C, “HDMI Control of CEC Devices,” page 66.  
HDMI  
Cable  
Source  
Device  
Any Con-  
nection Type  
837 Series: A/V Receiver with HDMI Output (no CEC)  
1. Set up NetCommand IR control of the A/V receiver’s keys as desired. See “IR  
A/V Receiver  
Emitter Placement,” page 46, and “Setting Up A/V Receiver Control,” page 52.  
HDMI  
Cable  
2. Set up NetCommand IR control of the source device’s keys as desired. See  
“NetCommand Control of a Device Connected to an HDMI A/V Receiver,” page  
55.  
TV  
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32  
TV Menus  
4
Main Menu  
Press MENU on the remote control to open the main menu and then select from one of these categories.  
Customize picture and sound settings.  
33  
37  
38  
40  
42  
Adjust  
Captions  
Initial  
Turn closed captions on and off; customize caption displays.  
Perform basic TV setup. Set language, scan (memorize) channels and edit  
channel options, set the TV clock, set Lamp Mode, set auto-on TV Timer.  
Assign names to TV inputs, enable HDMI Control, assign activities to inputs.  
837 Series. Perform NetCommand IR “learning.”  
Input  
Restrict TV use. Disable the control-panel buttons. Set a pass code.  
Lock  
Menu Navigation  
Displays or clears the main menu.  
Moves up one menu level.  
Clears the current menu.  
Moves navigation into options  
area.  
Selects an item.  
Moves the highlight within menus.  
Makes adjustments in some  
menus.  
Look for the key guide at  
the bottom of each menu.  
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4. TV Menus  
33  
Adjust  
Picture  
Audio  
Reset  
See page 35 for picture adjustments.  
See page 36 for audio adjustments.  
Resets audio and picture adjustments for the current input. Highlight the Reset icon and press  
ENTER twice  
.
Reset has no effect on settings for Balance, Listen To, Language, Film Mode, and Advanced  
Picture.  
Global  
Video Mute  
(non-antenna  
inputs only)  
On  
Displays a solid colored background when there is no video signal  
from the current input. The colored screen reminds you that the  
TV is powered on when there is no picture. The TV will power off  
after five minutes without receiving a video signal.  
Off  
The screen appears black when there is no video signal from the  
current input.  
Audio  
On, Off  
Select On to display a random pattern while playing an audio-only  
Screensaver  
input. To use this feature, the input must be either  
Named CD or MP3 Player and selected under the Listen  
Music activity.  
or  
Be the ANT input.  
Note: When playing an audio-only input, the TV will power off  
after 12 hours of inactivity.  
Film Mode  
(480i and 1080i  
signals only)  
Auto, Off In Auto, the TV automatically detects and applies film-decoding cor-  
rection to movies filmed at 24 frames per second. Try the Off setting  
if images show many jagged edges.  
Smooth 120Hz  
Off, On  
When On, Smooth 120Hz™ reduces motion blur in action scenes but  
may show pixel structure during slower motion or in still images.  
Blue Glow  
On, Off  
Select On to see blue accent lighting when the TV is powered on.  
(837 series)  
Displays a test picture for use by TV servicers.  
Test Picture  
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34  
4. TV Menus  
Adjust, continued  
Picture+  
PerfectColor Sliders  
Adjusts the saturation (intensity) of six colors for  
the current image source.  
PerfectTint Sliders  
(837 series)  
Adjusts six hues for the current image source  
PerfectColor  
Using PerfectColor:  
Highlight the PerfectColor™ icon and press ENTER to display the PerfectColor menu. Settings are  
retained independently for each TV input.  
Using PerfecTint (837 Series):  
To switch between PerfectColor™ and PerfecTint™ adjustments, highlight Adjust Mode and  
press  
Press  
Press  
.
to move from one color bar to the next.  
to change settings.  
Press CANCEL to restore default settings.  
Press MENU to return to the main menu.  
Advanced Picture allows you to save highly customized picture adjustments  
for each input. Mitsubishi recommends a professional installer make  
these adjustments.  
Advanced  
Picture  
1. Press MENU. Under Picture+, highlight the Advanced Picture icon and press ENTER  
2. With Picture Mode highlighted, press ENTER to change from blank (undefined) to ADV  
837 Series: Choose ADV1 (daytime settings) or ADV2 (nighttime settings)  
.
.
3. Use  
4. Press  
5. Use  
to highlight an option you wish to change and press ENTER.  
to change settings.  
to navigate through the screen to additional options and press  
to change settings.  
6. Press MENU to close the menu. The Advanced Picture adjustments will be in effect for the  
current input.  
To use the custom Picture Mode at a later time  
Press MENU and go to Adjust > Picture > Picture Mode and:  
737 and C9 Series  
837 Series  
Select SPECIAL if settings were saved by  
Select ISF Day or ISF Night if settings were  
your professional installer.  
saved by your professional installer.  
Otherwise select ADV.  
Otherwise select ADV1 or ADV2.  
To return to the default values for Advanced Picture  
Display the Picture+ > Advanced Picture menu and:  
737 and C9 Series  
837 Series  
1. Highlight the Advanced Picture mode to change.  
2. Highlight RESET Pic Mode and press ENTER  
Repeat this separately for both ADV1 and ADV2.  
Highlight RESET Pic Mode and press ENTER  
.
.
3D Mode  
3D Mode  
On, Off  
Use the On setting for video games and movies that require 3-D  
glasses. This setting applies only to the current input.  
Note: 3D options are available only for 1080p 60-Hz video  
sources connected to an HDMI input.  
Glasses L-R  
Standard,  
Reverse  
Synchronizes the 3D glasses with the image on screen to provide  
the best 3D effect. Try Reverse if Standard seems incorrect.  
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4. TV Menus  
35  
Adjust, continued  
Assign names to TV inputs before making  
video adjustments (New Device Found or  
Inputs > Name menu). Adjustments will be  
reset to the defaults if you name or rename  
inputs afterwards. To make picture adjust-  
ments:  
1. Press  
2. Press  
to highlight an option.  
to adjust.  
3. Press BACK when finished  
While watching TV: Press the MORE key and then  
(VIDEO) in the on-screen menu. Press to  
.
Picture  
8
select the video option you want to change. Press  
From the Adjust > Picture menu:  
to change settings.  
Brilliant  
For use under bright light; unavailable when the current  
input is named Game or PC  
Set the Picture Mode first  
before changing other video  
settings, as some settings are  
stored independently for each  
Picture Mode. Use Picture  
Modes to get the best image  
under different viewing condi-  
tions.  
.
Game  
Optimizes picture and video processing for gaming  
consoles. Available only when the name of the input is  
Game or PC.  
Picture  
Mode  
Bright  
For most daytime viewing and x.v.Color sources  
Natural  
Special  
For most nighttime viewing and x.v.Color sources  
Advanced Picture Modes. Contact your professional installer for setup or see “Advanced Picture  
on the opposite page  
737, C9 series: Special/ADV  
837 series: ISF Day/ADV1, ISF Night/ADV2  
.
ISF Day,  
ISF Night  
Low contrast shows a variety of shades in darker images  
In most home lighting situations, medium contrast looks best.  
High contrast shows darker images more uniformly black and  
makes colors appear more vibrant. High contrast is good for  
brightly lit environments.  
Adjusts the white-to-black level  
Settings are stored indepen-  
dently for each Picture Mode.  
Contrast  
Brightness  
Color  
Adjusts overall picture brightness. Settings are stored independently for each Picture Mode.  
Adjusts overall color intensity from no color to fully saturated.  
Adjusts the red-to-green ratio.  
Tint  
Sharpness  
Adjusts picture detail and clarity.  
High  
Gives white images a cool cast. May provide the most  
realistic picture under bright lighting.  
Adjusts the white balance.  
Settings are stored indepen-  
dently for each Picture Mode.  
Color  
Temp  
Low  
Gives white images a warm cast. Natural/Color Temp  
at the low setting displays video at approximately the  
6500K industry standard for NTSC pictures.  
High  
Medium  
Low  
Use High with poor-quality signals.  
Use Medium for moderate noise reduction.  
Use Low with good-quality signals.  
Use Off to leave the picture unaltered.  
Reduces minor noise (graini-  
ness) in the picture. Saved by  
input. This adjustment is not  
available if the current input is  
named PC or Game or when 3D  
is active.  
Video  
Noise  
Off  
On, Off  
737, 837 Series. SharpEdge™ adds special edge enhancements to make the image  
appear sharper. Saved by input.  
SharpEdge  
On, Off  
Demo  
737, 837 Series. DeepField™ Imager dynamically enhances black levels in portions of  
the screen to provide strong contrast with detail over mixed screen content.  
DeepField  
Imager  
For comparison, displays a split picture to show On (right side) and Off (left side).  
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36  
4. TV Menus  
Adjust, continued  
To make audio adjustments:  
From the Adjust > Audio menu:  
1. Press  
2. Press  
to highlight an option  
to adjust.  
Audio  
3. Press BACK when finished.  
While watching TV: Press the MORE key and then  
9
(AUDIO) in the on-screen menu. Press  
the audio option you want to change. Press  
change settings.  
to select  
to  
Speakers  
The Speakers option displays only if an A/V receiver or headphone connection has been  
detected. Detection occurs on the right AVR AUDIO OUTPUT jack and the DIGITAL AUDIO OUT  
jack. An A/V receiver can also be detected on an HDMI jack.  
TV  
Turns on the internal TV speakers.  
AV Receiver  
Turns off the TV speakers so you hear sound only from a connected A/V receiver.  
Note: When you disconnect an analog A/V receiver, be sure to change the  
Speakers setting to TV to hear sound from the TV speakers.  
Headphones  
Turns off the TV speakers so you hear sound only from connected headphones.  
See “7. AVR AUDIO OUTPUT,” page 16. This option is not available if DIGITAL  
AUDIO OUTPUT is connected.  
Bass  
Controls volume of low-pitched sound from the TV speakers.  
Controls volume of high-pitched sound from the TV speakers.  
Controls audio balance between the right and left TV speakers  
Treble  
Balance  
Sound Mode  
Stereo  
No special audio effects from the TV speakers  
Modifies audio from the TV speakers.  
Surround  
For monaural (non-stereo) programs, creates a simulated stereo effect.  
For stereo programs, creates a simulated surround sound effect.  
Listen To  
Stereo  
Mono  
The TV plays stereo broadcasts in stereo and mono broadcasts in mono. The  
word Stereo is displayed when you tune to a channel broadcasting in stereo.  
Available only  
for analog  
channels from  
the ANT input  
Reduces background noise. Use when receiving a weak stereo audio signal. All  
audio is played as mono with this setting.  
SAP  
(Second  
Audio  
Program)  
Selects an additional monaural sound track not audible during normal TV viewing.  
The SAP signal might be related to the program (such as a sound track in a foreign  
language), or it might be unrelated (such as a weather report). If an SAP signal is  
broadcast, the letters SAP are displayed when you tune to the channel.  
Language  
Selects the current language for a digital program from the ANT input. Each digital program may  
include from zero to seven language choices.  
Available only for digital channels from the ANT input.  
Level Sound  
On, Off  
Reduces differences in sound volume between programming segments, such as  
the difference between regular broadcast programs and commercial segments.  
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4. TV Menus  
37  
Captions  
IMPORTANT  
Captions on Analog Channels  
Analog text-service options display a large  
black or gray box on the screen when no  
signal is being broadcast.  
The TV can decode captions from the ANT INPUT and  
the composite VIDEO jacks. Broadcasters can send  
either standard closed captions or text service. Standard  
closed captions follow the dialogue of the program and  
display in a small section of the screen. Text-service closed  
captions often contain information such as weather or  
news and cover a large portion of the screen.  
The content of captions is determined by the  
broadcaster. If captions show strange char-  
acters, misspellings, or odd grammar, it is not  
a malfunction of the TV.  
Closed-caption signals are not available through  
HDMI or component jacks. See the menus for  
devices connected to these inputs for closed-  
caption decoding.  
Captions on Digital Channels  
The TV can decode captions from the ANT input only.  
Broadcasters can send up to six different captioning  
selections or can send analog captions for a program  
that originated in analog format. A TV station may broad-  
cast only one or two types of captions or none at all  
.
Services  
Digital  
Analog  
On if Mute  
Caption 1–  
Caption 6  
Off  
On if Mute: Displays digital closed-caption signal Caption 1  
when audio from the TV speakers is muted. When watching  
TV, press MUTE to turn closed captions on/off.  
Caption 1–Caption 6: Caption signals sent by the broad-  
caster  
On if Mute  
CC 1–CC 4  
Text 1–Text 4  
Off  
On if Mute: Displays analog closed captions signal CC 1  
when audio from the TV speakers is muted. When watching  
TV, press MUTE to turn captions on/off.  
CC 1–CC 4: Standard closed-caption signals  
Text 1–Text 4: Text-service signals  
Analog Back- Gray, Black  
ground  
Selects either a gray or black text background to make analog  
closed captions easier to read.  
Effects  
Font  
Default  
Font 1–Font 7  
Default changes settings to those selected by the captions pro-  
vider, or, if none, to the TV’s own caption defaults. Use Fonts 1  
through 7 to give captions on digital channels a custom appear-  
ance.  
(for captions  
from digital  
channels)  
Font Size  
Large  
Medium  
Small  
Large is the recommended size.  
Font Color  
White, Black, Magenta, etc.  
Guidelines for setting digital captions:  
Font Opacity  
Translucent, Opaque, Flashing,  
Transparent  
A white font on a black translucent  
background makes an easy-to-read  
combination.  
Use contrasting colors for captions and  
background.  
Background  
Color  
White, Black, Magenta, etc.  
Background  
Opacity  
Translucent, Opaque, Flashing,  
Transparent  
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38  
4. TV Menus  
Initial  
Language  
English  
Spanish  
Displays on-screen menus in either English or Spanish.  
Note: To listen to audio in other languages (when available), see Adjust > Audio >  
Listen To > SAP (analog signal) or Language (digital signal) on page 36.  
Clock  
Set the TV clock to:  
Use the TV Timer to power on the TV automatically at a preset time  
Receive correct updates to ChannelView listings  
Note: When the Daylight Savings Time change occurs, you must open this menu and set the TV’s  
clock ahead or back.  
Time  
1. With the hour highlighted, press  
to change the hour and the AM/PM indicator.  
Press and hold to change the hour display quickly.  
2. Press ENTER to set the hour.  
3. With the minutes highlighted, press  
to change the minutes. Press and hold to  
change the minutes display quickly.  
Date  
1. With the month highlighted, press  
2. With the day highlighted, press  
3. With the year highlighted, press  
to select. Press ENTER to set.  
to select. Press ENTER to set.  
to select the current year.  
Time Zone Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific, etc. The correct time zone is required for accurate  
ChannelView updates.  
DST  
On, Off  
Daylight Savings Time. Select the setting for your area. The  
correct DST setting is required for accurate ChannelView updates.  
Timer  
Timer  
On, Off  
Select On to enable the Timer.  
The Timer tells the TV to power on automatically at a time you set. Use this menu to set a day, time,  
input, and channel for the Timer. If the TV is already on at the requested time, the TV will automati-  
cally change to the designated channel or input.  
The TV clock must be set before you can use the Timer feature.  
To remind you that the TV Timer has been set, the POWER indicator on the front of the TV flashes  
slowly while the TV is powered off.  
When the Timer turns on the TV, press any key on the remote control to keep it on. Otherwise,  
the TV will turn off after five minutes.  
Day  
Daily, Mon-Fri, (every) Sunday, (every) Monday, (every) Tuesday, etc.  
Select the day or days of the week for the Timer to turn on the TV.  
Time  
To set the time for the TV to come on:  
4. With the hour highlighted, press  
repeatedly to change the hour and the AM/  
PM indicator. Press and hold to change the hour display quickly.  
5. Press ENTER to highlight the minutes.  
6. Press  
to change the minutes. Press and hold to change the minutes display quickly.  
Input  
Ant, DVD, VCR, etc.  
Select the input you want displayed when the TV comes on. Choose from the defined  
and enabled inputs that appear in the Activity menu.  
Channel  
If the source is the ANT input, select a channel number by pressing  
or press and  
hold to scroll through channels.  
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4. TV Menus  
39  
Initial, continued  
Channel  
Ant Air,  
Ant Cable  
You must perform a channel scan to receive digital channels. Scan searches for broad-  
cast channels and adds them to TV memory. To start channel scan  
1. Highlight one of the input selections based on your connection to the ANT input  
:
:
Scan  
Air when connected to an indoor or outdoor antenna.  
Cable when connected to direct cable (no cable box)  
(Channel  
Manage-  
ment)  
2. Press to highlight SCAN.  
3. Press ENTER to start channel memorization.  
Edit  
After channel scan, Edit lets you add and delete memorized channels.  
Press PAGE DN/UP to jump to the next or previous page of channel numbers.  
Press to move through all channel numbers, one at a time.  
3. Use the number keys and CANCEL key to enter  
the physical channel number followed by “-1”  
and ENTER. For example, for physical channel  
36, press  
Notes on Scan and channel memorization  
Channel memorization may take up to 15 minutes  
to complete.  
To stop channel memorization before completion,  
ENTER  
.
3
6
1
press CANCEL Channels already added are retained.  
.
The TV will search for a digital channel on the channel  
36 frequency. When it finds the channel, it will:  
When watching TV, press CH  
to move through  
memorized channels.  
a. Add the channel to memory.  
b. Change the channel number to the virtual  
channel number sent by the broadcaster.  
c. Add to memory any associated sub-  
channels.  
To add a digital channel that does not appear in the  
Edit menu without repeating channel memorization:  
1. Look up the physical channel number for  
the new digital channel. See the website  
Rememorize channels if you move the TV to a differ-  
ent geographic area with a different channel line-up.  
2. Press ACTIVITY and select the ANT input.  
Adding/Deleting Channels Using the Channel Edit Menu  
Channels marked with a check are in memory.  
To add or delete a channel from memory, highlight the channel number and press ENTER  
To add a single digital channel not in the list, see the notes under Scan on this page.  
Digital channels are listed by virtual channel number with the physical channel number shown in small gray text.  
.
See below for an explanation of these terms.  
-
-
Virtual Channel Number (digital channels only). A channel number sent by a local broadcaster. Usually the  
virtual number is associated with the corresponding analog channel number. For example, a broadcaster may  
associate digital channel 2-1 with their analog channel 2.  
Physical Digital Channel Number. The channel number officially assigned to the actual broadcast frequency;  
shown on screen in gray text.  
Lamp  
Lamp  
Standard, Standard is for most viewing conditions. Use Bright in brightly lit rooms.  
Bright You may notice increased fan noise when using the Bright setting.  
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40  
4. TV Menus  
Inputs  
Name  
Cablebox, Cam(corder), CD, DVD  
Lets you assign or change names of inputs appearing in  
(DVD, DVD2, Blu-ray), DVR, Game  
(Game, PS, Xbox, Wii), MP3 Player,  
PC, Satellite, VCR, AVR  
the Activity menu.  
-
-
-
Press  
Press  
to move between inputs.  
to select a name.  
You cannot change the name of the current input; you  
must first switch to another input. If you have only one  
input, such as a cable box, make sure the Ant input is  
On and switch to Antenna in the Activity menu before  
renaming the single input.  
Delete (deactivated HDMI only)  
On/Off (ANT only)  
Lets you turn the Ant input On/Off (to display/hide it in the Activ-  
ity menu).  
Lets you delete unused HDMI inputs from the Activity menu.  
A CEC-enabled tuner can be named either Cable Box or  
Satellite  
A CEC-enabled DVD player can be named DVD  
Blu-ray.  
.
,
DVD2, or  
General Notes  
When you change an input name in the Name menu and then exit the Name menu:  
The name is changed  
The icon in the Activity menu is changed  
Audio and video settings are changed to the defaults for the new device type.  
837 Series: All previous NetCommand IR “learning” for the input is erased.  
Notes for HDMI devices  
Disconnecting an HDMI device: When you disconnect an HDMI device, the icon remains in the Activity menu until  
you remove it. Select Delete in the Inputs > Name menu to remove an unwanted icon for an HDMI input.  
If the New Device Found screen does not display as expected when you connect an HDMI device, see “Reac-  
tivating Auto Input Sensing for an HDMI Input,” page 11.  
HDMI Control and CEC-Enabled Devices: See Appendix C, “HDMI Control of CEC Devices,” page 66.  
If case of CEC conflicts: Turn off CEC signals in one of these ways:  
-
-
Turn off the TV’s HDMI Control signals to the device.  
Turn off each device’s internal CEC capability.  
See Appendix C for the TV’s HDMI Control or, to turn on/off a specific device’s response to CEC signals, see  
the device owner’s manual.  
Learn  
AVR  
837 Series  
Sets up or changes NetCommand IR control of the current viewing device.  
See “About NetCommand IR Control,” page 45.  
837 Series  
Sets up or changes NetCommand IR control of an A/V receiver.  
See “NetCommand IR Control of an A/V Receiver” on page 51.  
HDMI Control  
Activity  
On, Off  
Select On or Off to enable or disable the TV’s control of a CEC-enabled device.  
See Appendix C for use of this feature.  
Lets you customize the Activity menu choices for the current input.  
Highlight the activity name and press ENTER to make changes.  
See “How is the Activity Menu Generated?” on the opposite page.  
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4. TV Menus  
41  
Inputs, continued  
How is the Activity Menu Generated?  
The TV automatically generates the Activity menu  
based on recognized inputs. If the inputs have been  
named as device types, the TV groups the device types  
based on how they can be used. The device names  
used for groupings are those assigned in the New  
Device Found menu or the Inputs > Name menu. The  
table below summarizes the device groupings that can  
appear in the Activity menu.  
Key  
Activity assignments made automatically by the TV.  
X
Activity assignments you can make using the  
Inputs > Activity menu.  
Watch Watch  
Play  
View  
Listen  
TV  
9
9
Movie Game Photos Music  
Antenna  
AV Receiver  
Blu-ray  
Cable Box  
Camcorder  
CD/Audio  
DVD  
9
X
X
9
9
9
9
X
9
9
DVD2  
X
DVR  
9
Game  
9
9
MP3 Player  
PC  
9
9
X
X
X
X
9
9
PS  
9 9  
Satellite  
USB  
X
9
VCR  
9
Wii  
X
9
9
Xbox  
X
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42  
4. TV Menus  
Lock  
TV Locks  
Parental Menu  
The TV comes from the factory with the rating locks  
turned off and with pre-set U.S. ratings TV-PG and  
movie rating PG. Turn on blocking for U.S. ratings  
to activate these rating restrictions. Use the Lock >  
Parental menu to change the level of blocking with U.S.  
ratings.  
Parental Lock by Program Ratings  
Restricts access using U.S.-based ratings  
sent by broadcasters.  
Time  
Lock by Time  
Restricts TV use by time of day.  
Any time you change the channel or device, it may take  
up to five seconds for the rating restrictions to take  
effect.  
Panel  
Lock Control Panel  
Disables the buttons on the TV’s control  
panel. Use this option if small children  
in the home try to press control-panel  
buttons.  
Other Menu (Alternate Rating System)  
Other  
Lock by Other Program Ratings  
Restricts access using non-U.S.-based  
ratings sent by broadcasters.  
This TV can recognize new rating systems that may  
come into effect in the future. The Other menu allows  
you to block digital programming when such systems  
come into effect.  
The first time you tune to a channel broadcasting an  
alternate rating system, the TV defaults to the most  
restrictive setting if the Lock menu > Other Lock  
option is set to On. Use this menu to change the  
allowed rating if you are unable to watch a program  
rated with an alternate system.  
Pass Codes  
Setting a Pass Code  
You are prompted to enter a pass code whenever you  
select Lock on the main menu. To set a pass code for  
the first time:  
1. Press MENU and highlight Lock. A screen prompt-  
ing you for a pass code will display.  
Bypassing TV Locks  
2. Input a four-digit pass code using the number keys  
If you try to watch a blocked program or the TV is  
locked by time, a notice will appear prompting you  
for a pass code. To use the TV, input your four-digit  
on the remote control.  
Press CANCEL to delete a number and move  
back one space.  
pass code and press ENTER  
.
Press MENU or BACK to close the menu without  
-
To reactivate the locks after using a pass code,  
setting a pass code.  
power the TV off and then on.  
-
To reactivate only the parent ratings lock,  
change to a different channel or device.  
3. Press ENTER to set the pass code.  
Resetting a Pass Code  
If a program is blocked, you can still use the TV  
without entering a pass code. Change to a channel  
airing an allowed program or change to another  
device.  
See the procedure in Appendix A.  
Important Notes on Rating Locks  
Parental menu rating locks apply only to chan-  
nels and signals received on the ANT and com-  
posite VIDEO jacks.  
Other menu rating locks apply only to digital chan-  
nels received on ANT  
.
When viewing a cable box, satellite receiver,  
or other device connected to the component  
Y Pb Pr or HDMI inputs, check the device’s  
owner’s guide for parental locks.  
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4. TV Menus  
43  
Lock, continued  
Parental  
Lock  
Off, On  
Disables or enables blocking based on V-Chip signals and the U.S. rating system.  
Start  
Time  
Sets the time of day for enforcement of rating restrictions set in the Parental menu.  
1. Highlight the hour digits for Start Time.  
Stop  
Time  
2. Press  
repeatedly to change the hour and associated AM/PM indicator. You can also just press  
and hold to move quickly through the numbers.  
3. Press ENTER to highlight the minutes.  
4. With the minutes digits highlighted, press  
repeatedly to change the minutes. You can also just  
press and hold to move quickly through the numbers.  
5. Highlight the Stop Time digits and set the time as described above.  
Note: To make rating restrictions active 24 hours a day, make Start Time and Stop Time the same.  
TV  
Rating  
TV-Y  
Youth. For children under 7.  
Youth 7 and older.  
Highlight the rating level  
you wish to change and  
press ENTER to block it  
TV-Y7  
TV-G  
TV-PG  
General Audience. For the entire family.  
(
) or allow it ( ).  
You can apply supple-  
mental content blocking  
to the age-based ratings  
by using the TV content  
categories listed below.  
Parental Guidance. Parental Guidance recommended; may  
not be suitable for some children.  
TV-14  
Adolescent 14 and older. Not recommended for children under 14.  
TV-MA  
Mature Audience. For adults only.  
FV  
D
L
Fantasy Violence. Applies to TV-Y7 only.  
Sexual Dialog. Applies in differing degrees to TV-PG and TV-14.  
Adult Language. Applies in differing degrees to TV-PG, TV-14, and TV-MA.  
Sexual Situations. Applies in differing degrees to TV-PG, TV-14, and TV-MA.  
TV Content  
Categories  
S
V
Violence (graphic or realistic). Applies in differing degrees to TV-PG,  
TV-14, and TV-MA.  
Movie  
Rating  
G
General Audience. Designed for the entire family.  
PG  
PG-13  
R
Parental Guidance. Parental Guidance recommended; may not be suitable for some children.  
Parental Guidance, 13 and Older. Not recommended for children under 13.  
Restricted. Restricted in theaters to 17 years old and older unless accompanied by an adult.  
No Children 17 or Under. Restricted in theaters to 18 years old and older.  
Adult. Designed for and restricted in theaters to adult audiences only.  
NC-17  
X
Not Rated No MPAA rating assigned  
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44  
4. TV Menus  
Lock, continued  
Blocks all use of the TV during the time period you specify. You must enter a pass code to use the  
TV when the time lock is in effect.  
Time  
Lock by Time Enables/disables Lock by Time.  
Lock Time,  
To set the lock and unlock times:  
Unlock Time  
1. Highlight the hour digits for the Lock Time.  
2. Press  
move quickly through the numbers, just press and hold.  
3. Press ENTER to set the hour and highlight the minutes.  
repeatedly to change the hour and associated AM/PM indicator. To  
4. With the minutes highlighted, press  
repeatedly to change the minutes. To  
move quickly through the numbers, just press and hold.  
5. Highlight the Unlock Time digits and set the time as described above.  
Note:  
To make Lock by Time active 24 hours a day, make Start Time and Stop Time  
the same.  
Off, On  
On locks and Off unlocks the buttons on the TV’s control panel. Use this option if  
small children try to press TV buttons.  
Panel  
Other  
To release the Panel Lock from the TV’s control panel, press and hold the  
ACTIVITY button for ten seconds. If the TV is powered off, press POWER after the  
lock releases to make the TV power on.  
To reactivate the lock, return to this menu and change the setting to On.  
Other Menu Options (alternate rating system)  
This TV can recognize new rating systems that may come into effect in the future. The Other option  
remains grayed out until the TV receives a signal using an alternate rating system. Such alternate  
rating systems will apply only to digital programming received on the ANT input.  
Lock  
On, Off  
Enables/disables program blocking.  
System Name The rating system available for the channel  
Group  
Rating  
Rating groups available in the rating system shown on the screen. Rating groups are  
defined by the rating system in effect.  
Rating restrictions available in the selected rating system and group. Highlight the  
rating and press ENTER to check (block) or uncheck (allow) rated content.  
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45  
NetCommand IR Control  
5
About NetCommand IR Control  
NetCommand IR home-theater control is avail-  
able on 837 series models.  
NetCommand operates by sending remote control  
signals from the TV to your other devices via the  
IR (infrared) emitters, telling the devices to play,  
record, change inputs, adjust volume, change chan-  
nels, or perform other functions. All this is accom-  
plished with the TV’s remote control left in TV mode.  
IR emitter cables are available for purchase  
800-553-7278 and request one of the following:  
-
242D483020 (two-ended cable)  
You may wish to use NetCommand IR control to  
supplement control of CEC-enabled devices.  
-
299P254020 (four-ended cable).  
NetCommand setup is optional.  
Important Note on NetCommand  
You can perform NetCommand setup when the TV  
first recognizes a device during Auto Input Sensing  
or at any convenient time afterward.  
Be sure to connect the IR emitter cable to the  
TV and properly place the emitters so that  
NetCommand can control your devices.  
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46  
5. NetCommand IR Control (837 Series)  
IR Emitter Placement  
The NetCommand system uses emitters connected  
to the IR NetCommand Output jack to control other  
Other A/V Device  
devices such as DVD players, cable boxes, satellite  
receivers, and VCRs.  
S
CH  
R
IR emitter cables are available for purchase from  
Mitsubishi. Request either part number 242D483020  
(two-ended cable) or part number 299P254020 (four-  
ended cable).  
D
S
I
G
I
T
A
L
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
R
R
O
U
N
D
A/V Receiver  
DVI/PC INPUT  
AUDIO L  
ANT  
R
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
Pr  
HDMI  
2
TV Main  
Panel  
R
1
3
Y/ VIDEO  
Pb  
P
R
L
(480i  
/
480p  
/
720p  
/
1080i)  
AUDIO  
IR-NetCommand  
Output  
1. Connect the plug end of the supplied IR emitter  
cable to the IR—NetCommand Output jack on the  
TV back panel.  
Connecting IR–NetCommand Output  
2. When the New Device Found screen displays,  
*OꢀGSPOUꢀPGꢀBꢀTJOHMFꢀ  
BWFSBHFꢁTJ[FEꢀEFWJDF  
*3ꢀTFOTPSꢀ  
highlight EXIT and press ENTER  
.
0OꢀUPQꢀPGꢀBꢀTJOHMFꢀ  
UBMMꢀEFWJDF  
*3ꢀTFOTPSꢀ  
*3ꢀTFOTPSꢀ  
*3ꢀTFOTPSꢀ  
*OꢀGSPOUꢂꢀTIBSFEꢀCZꢀ  
UXPꢀBWFSBHFꢁTJ[FEꢀ  
EFWJDFT  
Place IR emitters so the signal can be “seen” by the IR  
sensor on each device.  
The New Device Found screen displays when you  
connect the IR emitter.  
If You are Unable to Locate  
a Device’s IR Sensor  
3. Position the emitter end with the emitter bulb facing  
the device’s remote control sensor. The bulb emits  
infrared light in a cone-shaped pattern. Place the  
bulb far enough from the sensor to allow the cone  
pattern to reach the sensor.  
The IR sensor is usually behind the plastic window  
of the front display panel. Using a flashlight, you  
may be able to see it as a round or square cutout.  
If you cannot see the sensor and the device’s  
Owner’s Guide does not specify the location, do  
the following using the device’s remote control.  
In some cases, the emitter works better facing  
downward from the top of the device. Experiment  
to find what works best.  
1. Starting at one end of the plastic window, hold  
the device’s remote control about one-half  
inch from the front of the device and press the  
POWER key.  
4. Secure the emitter ends in place using double-  
sided tape.  
2. If the device does not respond, move the  
remote control one inch toward the center and  
try again. Repeat until the device responds.  
5. Place any unused ends behind the devices to  
prevent stray signals from reaching the IR sensors.  
3. Repeat the previous steps starting at the other  
end of the window. The sensor will be between  
these two points.  
IMPORTANT  
Position IR emitters so that each device’s  
sensor “sees” the signal from only one emitter.  
Otherwise, a device receiving signals from  
multiple sources (remote controls, IR emitters)  
may not respond at all.  
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5. NetCommand IR Control (837 Series)  
47  
Initial NetCommand Setup  
To perform this procedure, you need:  
The remote controls for both the TV and the  
device you want to control.  
An IR emitter cable available from Mitsubishi  
.
Note: To set up an A/V receiver, see “Setting Up A/V  
Receiver Control,” page 52.  
1. Connect and position the IR emitters for the  
devices you wish to control. See “IR Emitter Place-  
ment” on the opposite page.  
2. Set the TV’s remote control to TV mode and power  
From the New Device Found screen, highlight  
NetCommand and press ENTER to open the Learn  
screen.  
on the TV.  
3. Open the NetCommand Learn screen as follows:  
If working from the New Device Found screen  
after the device is first detected, highlight  
NetCommand and press ENTER to open the  
Learn screen for the device.  
Device-specific keys in the  
rightmost column can be accessed  
with the MORE key after “learning.”  
If performing NetCommand setup at any time  
after the device has been recognized through  
Auto Input Sensing:  
a. Press ACTIVITY.  
b. Highlight the desired input icon and press  
ENTER to switch to that input.  
c. Press MENU, highlight Inputs, and highlight  
Learn to open the Inputs > Learn screen  
for the device.  
4. The first function highlighted in the Learn screen  
is always Power On. Aim the TV’s remote control  
at the TV and press ENTER to begin learning for that  
function.  
Inputs > Learn screen  
5. When the Power On text starts flashing, aim the  
device’s remote control at the TV and hold the POWER  
key until a check mark appears next to Power On.  
Key names marked with a  
check have been “learned.”  
If the text stops flashing before the check mark  
appears, repeat the previous step.  
To remove the key from NetCommand control,  
press the CANCEL key while the key name is  
highlighted.  
Adding or Removing Device Keys from  
NetCommand Control  
6. Press the  
keys on the TV’s remote control  
1. Switch the TV to the device. Press ACTIVITY, high-  
light the device’s icon, and press ENTER  
to highlight other keys on the list. Repeat steps  
4 and 5 for each additional function you wish to  
control through NetCommand.  
.
2. Open the Inputs menu and highlight the Learn icon.  
3. When the Learn screen displays:  
Note: Device keys in the far right column will be asso-  
ciated with the remote control’s MORE key when  
“learned.” See the table on page 49.  
To add keys: Continue as described earlier  
under “Initial NetCommand Setup” on this  
page.  
7. If the device has a separate POWER OFF key, press  
on the TV’s remote to highlight Power Off.  
To delete keys: Highlight the name of the key  
you wish to delete and press CANCEL on the  
TV‘s remote control to clear the check mark.  
Repeat the earlier steps to “learn” the POWER OFF key.  
If the device has no POWER OFF key, skip this step.  
8. Press BACK to finish NetCommand “learning” for the  
current device.  
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48  
5. NetCommand IR Control (837 Series)  
Operating NetCommand-Controlled Devices  
Controlling Most Device Types  
Note: if you have set up automatic input switching for  
the A/V receiver, the A/V receiver will automati-  
cally switch to the correct input for the device.  
As an example of NetCommand control, if you are  
watching your cable box and you wish to tune to the  
next channel higher, press CHANNEL UP. NetCommand  
then sends the “learned” channel-up control signal to  
the cable box.  
5. To operate the device using the TV’s remote  
control, press the side button to put the remote  
control into TV mode.  
6. Point the remote control at the TV (not the device)  
1. Perform NetCommand setup for the device as  
and press the key for the desired function.  
described in this chapter.  
7. Press the MORE key to access additional key func-  
2. When you wish to use the device, press ACTIVITY  
3. Press to highlight the icon for the device.  
.
tions you may have “learned” for the device.  
4. Press ENTER to switch the TV to the device.  
Special Operation Methods  
Key Name in  
Learning Screen  
Special Operation Description and Setup  
How to Use  
Power On  
Manual Power On/Off  
1. Press ACTIVITY.  
Use for devices that have only one POWER key.  
2. Press  
to highlight the icon for the  
device to be powered on or off.  
3. With the Activity menu still displayed, press  
POWER to send the power signal; you may  
need to press POWER twice.  
Note: If you press POWER without the Activity  
menu displayed, the TV will turn off.  
4. Press ENTER to switch the TV to the device.  
Power On  
Power Off  
Automatic Power On/Off  
To Power On the Device  
This feature is only for devices that have separate  
POWER ON and POWER OFF keys on their original  
remote controls. If your device does not have a  
separate POWER OFF key, do not use the Power  
Off learning position; use only the Manual Power  
ON/OFF method described above.  
1. Press ACTIVITY.  
2. Press  
to highlight the icon for  
the device to be powered on or off.  
3. Press ENTER to switch the TV to the  
device and NetCommand will send the  
Power On command to the device.  
In the NetCommand Learn screen:  
To Power Off the Device  
When you turn the TV off, the TV sends all  
learned Power Off commands to all devices.  
a. “Learn” the Power On command in the  
Power On learning position.  
b. “Learn” the Power Off command in the  
Power Off learning position.  
Menu  
Guide  
Displaying a Menu for the Current Device  
Press MORE and then  
command to the current device.  
1
to send the menu  
“Learn” the MENU key on the original remote in the  
Menu learning position.  
Displaying the On-Screen Program Guide  
(cable box or satellite receiver)  
1. While watching the device, press GUIDE to  
display the guide.  
2. Press PAGE UP/DOWN  
(
) to send the Page  
1. “Learn” the GUIDE key on the original remote in  
Up/Dn commands for the guide.  
the Guide learning position.  
2. Learn the PAGE UP and PAGE DOWN keys of the  
original remote in the Page Up and Page  
Down learning positions.  
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5. NetCommand IR Control (837 Series)  
49  
Key Name in  
Learning Screen  
Special Operation Description and Setup  
How to Use  
Enter  
ENTER-Key Functions (cable boxes, satellite receivers, etc.)  
Some devices have two keys that have “enter” functions. One key is for menus and is often labelled  
SELECT or OK. A second key is for use with number keys for direct channel selection. NetCommand  
uses the same ENTER key for both operations.  
When ENTER has a menu or guide function or  
when the original remote control uses the same  
key for menus and channel selection:  
1. Press MENU or GUIDE to display the device’s  
menu or guide.  
2. Press ENTER within the menu and  
NetCommand will send the Enter signal for  
menus.  
Learn the ENTER  
,
SELECT, or OK key in the  
NetCommand Enter learning position.  
Enter (digits) When ENTER is for channel changes, i.e., the origi- Press digit key(s) and then press ENTER  
.
nal remote control has a separate ENTER key for  
NetCommand will send the Enter signal for  
this function):  
channel selection.  
Learn the ENTER key for channel selection in  
the NetCommand Enter (digits) learning posi-  
tion. Use this learning position only if the original  
remote control has separate keys for Enter in  
menus and Enter for channel selection.  
Cancel  
CANCEL as the Cancel or Exit Function  
1. Press MENU or GUIDE to display the menu or  
guide.  
“Learn” the Cancel or Exit function in the  
NetCommand Cancel learning position  
2. Press CANCEL and NetCommand will send  
the Cancel or Exit signal.  
The symbol “—” can serve as the separator  
Press digit key(s) and press CANCEL.  
(separator) between a digital channel’s main and sub-channel NetCommand will send the channel-separator  
digits, e.g., digital channel 12-1 (main channel is  
signal.  
12, sub-channel is 1).  
“Learn” the channel separator function in the  
NetCommand – (separator) learning position.  
The MORE Key Menu and NetCommand  
Perform NetCommand setup for these device-specific  
keys and then access their functions with the MORE key.  
Device  
Key  
Device  
Key  
Menu  
Top Menu  
Input  
Angle  
SP/EP  
Audio (DVD)  
Subtitle  
Repeat  
List  
On Demand  
A
B
C
D
Bonus View  
Setup  
Surround  
Night  
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50  
5. NetCommand IR Control (837 Series)  
Operating NetCommand-Controlled Devices, continued  
NetCommand Specialized Device Keys  
Refer to this chart when “learning” device keys. “Learn”  
some, all, or none of the keys used for each device  
type.  
See page 48 for more on keys marked in the “Special  
Operation Method” column.  
See Special  
Operation  
Method Table  
Key Name in  
Function  
Name on TV  
Remote Control  
Learning Screen  
Power On  
Guide  
Power On or Power ON/OFF (toggle)  
On-Screen Program Guide or DVD Disc Menus  
Next Channel Higher  
9
9
Channel +  
Channel –  
Next Channel Lower  
Page Up  
Page Dn  
Page Up in Guides  
Page Down in Guides  
Up  
Arrow up  
Down  
Left  
Arrow down  
Arrow left  
Right  
Enter  
Arrow right  
Enter or Select (menus)  
9
9
Cancel  
Play  
Cancel or erase (menus)  
Start playback  
Stop  
Stop playback  
Forward  
Rewind  
Pause  
Fast Forward  
Rewind/Fast Reverse  
Pause playback  
Start Recording  
Record  
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0 Digits  
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0  
Enter (digits)  
- (separator)  
Use after entering digits to tune directly to a  
channel by number  
9
9
Add digital channel separator between main  
channel number and sub-channel number  
Last  
Info  
Last Channel Recall  
On-screen status display or information display  
May require two  
keypresses  
Power Off  
Power Off  
9
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51  
NetCommand IR Control of an A/V  
Receiver  
6
Several types of A/V receiver control can be set up  
using the Inputs > AVR menu.  
Controlling an A/V Receiver  
after NetCommand Setup  
Power and volume. See the next page.  
Audio switching. For most equipment setups, see  
“Case 1: Automatic A/V Receiver Switching to the  
TV Audio Input” page 53.  
Switching Audio to and from the A/V  
Receiver  
1. Press MORE and then (AUDIO).  
2. Press to show the Speakers option.  
3. Press to select either AV Receiver or TV.  
9
Audio switching and surround sound. To set up  
switching to a surround sound device, see “Case  
2: Automatic A/V Receiver Switching to a Surround  
Sound Device” page 54  
Audio and video switching over HDMI. If your  
A/V receiver has an HDMI output, it may be con-  
venient to send audio and video to the TV over a  
single HDMI cable through the A/V receiver. See  
“Case 3: Automatic Audio and Video Switching via  
HDMI,” page 54.  
Controlling A/V Receiver Power  
With Any Connection Type  
1. Press MORE and then  
9
(AUDIO).  
2. Press to show the Speakers option.  
3. Press to select AV Receiver.  
4. Point the remote control at the TV (not the A/V  
receiver) and press POWER to power the A/V  
receiver on or off.  
Note: To set up control of other device types, see  
“Initial NetCommand Setup,” page 47.  
With an HDMI Connection  
1. Press ACTIVITY  
.
2. Highlight the A/V receiver icon.  
3. Press POWER  
.
Controlling Other A/V Receiver Functions  
With the A/V receiver powered on and selected, the  
TV’s remote control operates the volume and mute  
functions. Also, when you switch to a device in the  
Activity menu, the A/V receiver automatically switches  
to the correct audio input for the device.  
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52  
6. NetCommand Control of an A/V Receiver (837 Series)  
Setting Up A/V Receiver Control  
Power and Volume  
Perform this setup to control the A/V receiver power  
and volume with the TV’s remote control.  
To perform this setup you need:  
The remote controls for both the TV and the  
A/V receiver.  
An IR emitter cable available from Mitsubishi.  
Before You Begin  
Inputs > AVR screen. Perform  
NetCommand IR “learning” for A/V  
receiver power and volume keys.  
1. Connect your A/V receiver to the TV and any addi-  
tional devices. See “Setting Up TV Inputs,” page 10  
and “TV Connections,” page 14.  
2. Connect the IR emitter cable to the TV and position  
the IR emitter where it can send signals to the A/V  
receiver. See “IR Emitter Placement,” page 46.  
3. When the Power text starts flashing, aim the A/V  
receiver’s remote control at the TV and hold the  
POWER or POWER ON key until a check mark appears  
next to Power.  
3. Set the TV’s remote control to TV mode using the  
side button.  
If the text stops flashing before the check mark  
appears, repeat this step.  
Setup to Control A/V Receiver Power and Volume  
To remove the key from NetCommand control,  
press the CANCEL key while the key name is  
highlighted.  
1. Open the Inputs > AVR screen in one of two ways:  
If using the New Device Found screen for the  
A/V receiver, highlight NetCommand and press  
ENTER to open the AVR screen.  
4. Press the key on the TV’s remote control to highlight  
other keys in the list. Repeat steps 2 and 3 for each addi-  
tional function you wish to control through NetCommand.  
If performing NetCommand setup at any time  
after Auto Sensing:  
5. If the A/V receiver has a separate POWER OFF key,  
press on the TV’s remote to highlight Power Off.  
Repeat steps 2 and 3 to “learn” the POWER OFF key.  
If the device has no POWER OFF key, skip this step.  
Press MENU, highlight Inputs, and highlight AVR  
to open the AVR menu.  
2. The first function highlighted in the AVR screen is  
always Power. Aim the TV’s remote control at the  
TV and press ENTER to begin learning for Power.  
6. When finished “learning” the power and volume  
keys, either  
To watch TV, press BACK  
To continue with NetCommand setup to control  
.
switching of A/V receiver inputs, highlight  
NEXT and press ENTER  
.
IMPORTANT  
To hear audio sent from the TV to the A/V receiver,  
you must have:  
Physically connected the TV to the A/V receiver  
via the analog or digital audio output.  
Assigned, if needed, the name AVR if using an  
HDMI A/V receiver.  
Learned” the IR codes for the A/V receiver  
inputs.  
Assigned the TV’s audio output to the correct  
input in the NetCommand Inputs > AVR menu.  
Selected the A/V receiver as the audio source.  
Press MORE then 9 (AUDIO), then  
to show  
the Speakers option, then to select the A/V  
Receiver.  
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6. NetCommand Control of an A/V Receiver (837 Series)  
53  
Setting Up A/V Receiver Control, continued  
Analog Stereo Audio. Audio from sources with only  
analog stereo output (such as a VCR) can be sent either  
directly to the A/V receiver or through the TV first.  
Automatic Audio or Audio/Video Switching  
The following setups enable the A/V receiver to switch  
automatically to the correct input when you select a  
device in the TV’s Activity menu.  
Mitsubishi recommends you send audio through the  
TV as shown in the example. The TV converts analog  
audio to digital format to send to a digital A/V receiver.  
Three different connection arrangements are described  
here. Review the descriptions to find the setup needed  
for your equipment.  
HDMI Digital Stereo Audio. Digital stereo audio  
from an HDMI connection is available both in digital  
and analog format from the TV’s analog and digital  
audio output jacks.  
To hear digital surround sound from a source device  
you must use the setup described for Case 2  
.
To set up control of an A/V receiver you need:  
VCR with  
Analog Audio Output  
The remote controls for the TV and A/V receiver.  
An IR emitter cable available from Mitsubishi.  
Connecting cables  
audio output from  
TV (digital or analog)  
IMPORTANT  
DVD audio  
input  
TV audio input  
All audio from what you are watching on the TV is  
always available from both the TV’s AVR AUDIO  
OUTPUT and DIGITAL AUDIO OUTPUT jacks.  
TV audio  
TV  
out  
A/V Receiver  
To use the digital surround sound capabilities of  
your A/V receiver however, you must connect the  
audio output from your DVD player, satellite receiver,  
or cable box directly to the A/V receiver.  
Incoming Coaxial Cable  
to TV’s ANT input  
Important: To use this setup, you must connect the TV’s  
audio output to the A/V receiver’s TV audio input jack.  
Before You Begin  
1. In the Inputs > AVR menu, press  
to highlight  
TV audio out as the A/V receiver input to control.  
1. Connect your A/V devices to the TV and connect  
your A/V receiver to the audio outputs on the TV  
and the DVD player. Note the name of the device  
connected to each A/V receiver input. See initial  
setup, page 10, and “TV Connections,” page 14.  
2. Press ENTER on the TV’s remote control.  
3. While the text TV audio out is flashing, press and  
hold the TV INPUT key on the A/V receiver’s remote  
control.  
2. Position NetCommand IR emitters as described in  
4. When a check appears next to TV audio out,  
“IR Emitter Placement,” page 46.  
release the TV INPUT key.  
3. Set the TV’s remote control to TV mode using the  
If the text stops flashing before the check mark  
appears, repeat this step.  
side button.  
To erase the IR code just “learned,” press  
CANCEL while the name is highlighted.  
4. Open the Inputs > AVR menu, highlight NEXT  
and press ENTER to display the device-key-learning  
menu.  
5. Press MENU if finished or continue with Case 2 setup  
for another audio source.  
Case 1: Automatic A/V Receiver  
Switching to the TV Audio Input  
Most devices are set up to use the TV’s audio output like  
the VCR in this example; analog audio from the device is  
sent through the TV to the A/V receiver’s TV audio input.  
Use this setup for:  
Audio Available from TV only. Send audio from  
the ANT input to the A/V receiver from the TV’s  
analog or digital audio output.  
Case 1: NetCommand setup for controlling A/V  
receiver switching to the A/V receiver’s audio input from  
Use this setup to make the A/V receiver switch to its  
designated TV audio input when viewing programming  
from the ANT input.  
the TV The list displayed represents inputs in use. The  
.
device names are those you assigned during Auto Input  
Sensing or in the Inputs > Name menu..  
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54  
6. NetCommand Control of an A/V Receiver (837 Series)  
Setting Up A/V Receiver Control, continued  
5. If finished, highlight EXIT and press ENTER or  
continue to set up additional A/V receiver audio  
sources.  
Case 2: Automatic A/V Receiver Switching  
to a Surround Sound Device  
Note: Use this setup to send digital surround sound  
from a device directly to your sound system.  
Case 3: Automatic Audio and  
Video Switching via HDMI  
A device can send digital surround sound such as Dolby  
Digital or DTS directly to the A/V receiver. The device might  
be a DVD player, cable box, or satellite receiver, and could  
have HDMI output. A DVD player is used in this example.  
If your A/V receiver has an HDMI output, it may be  
convenient to route video signals from multiple devices  
over a single cable to the TV. Use this procedure to set  
up NetCommand control of the A/V receiver’s audio  
and video switching over a single HDMI cable. The  
connected source devices can be analog, digital, or a  
mixture or the two. When this setup is complete, you  
can use the TV’s Activity menu to select a video device  
connected to the A/V receiver.  
Your setup may include additional devices with digital  
surround sound connected directly to the A/V receiver.  
These devices might be a DVD player plus a cable box  
or satellite receiver.  
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57  
HDMI  
TV  
Output  
HDMI Cable  
Case 2: A/V receiver audio from a device providing  
surround sound directly to the A/V receiver  
VCR  
1. In the Inputs > AVR menu, press  
to highlight  
Blu-ray player  
the name of the A/V receiver input to control. In this  
DVD player  
Cable box  
example, it is the DVD input.  
2. Press ENTER on the TV’s remote control.  
More About Using an HDMI Connection  
Audio from devices connected directly to the TV  
can be heard from the TV speakers only. To send  
audio to the A/V receiver from such devices, use  
one of the optional audio connections shown in the  
diagram on the opposite page. For example, use  
an optional audio connection if you wish to use the  
A/V receiver speakers to hear audio from:  
-
-
The ANT input  
A game or camcorder connected to the conve-  
nience input (INPUT 3).  
Case 2: NetCommand setup for  
controlling A/V receiver switching  
to the A/V receiver’s DVD input. The list contains  
connected inputs with names assigned during Auto  
Input Sensing.  
In some circumstances, audio from a device con-  
nected to the A/V receiver may not be passed over  
the HDMI cable to the TV speakers. In these cases  
you must use the A/V receiver speakers to hear  
audio.  
3. While the text DVD is flashing, press and hold the  
DVD INPUT key on the A/V receiver’s remote control.  
Before You Begin  
4. When a check appears next to DVD, release the  
To complete these steps you will need:  
DVD INPUT key.  
The remote controls for both the TV and the  
A/V receiver.  
If the text stops flashing before the check mark  
appears, repeat this step.  
An IR emitter cable available from Mitsubishi.  
To erase the IR code just “learned,” press  
CANCEL while the name is highlighted.  
An HDMI-to-HDMI cable to connect the A/V  
receiver to the TV and cables necessary to  
connect devices to the A/V receiver.  
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6. NetCommand Control of an A/V Receiver (837 Series)  
55  
Setting Up A/V Receiver Control, continued  
1. Connect your audio/video devices to the A/V  
receiver. Note the name of the device connected  
to each A/V receiver input. This information will be  
needed later to set up NetCommand’s automatic  
input switching.  
6. Perform the procedure in “Case 2: Automatic A/V  
Receiver Switching to a Surround Sound Device”  
on the opposite page.  
2. Connect the A/V receiver to the TV with an HDMI-to-  
HDMI cable.  
3. Connect the IR emitter cable to the TV and position  
the IR emitter where it can send signals to the A/V  
receiver. See “IR Emitter Placement,” page 46.  
Setup to Control Automatic Audio  
and Video Switching via HDMI  
1. Power on the A/V receiver.  
2. Set the TV’s remote control to TV mode using the  
To set up A/V switching over HDMI, choose your  
devices from a list. Unlike the device list described for  
Case 2, this generic list contains more than just the  
devices detected in your setup.  
side button.  
3. Power on the TV.  
4. When the New Device Found screen displays, select  
device name AVR if it is not recognized automatically.  
5. Navigate to the Inputs > AVR menu or, from  
within the New Device Found screen, highlight  
NetCommand Control of a Device Con-  
nected to an HDMI A/V Receiver  
NetCommand and press ENTER  
.
DVI/PC INPUT  
ANT  
Use this setup to have NetCommand control a device  
sending audio and video through the A/V receiver to the  
TV via HDMI.  
L
TV main panel  
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
3D  
HDMI  
2
GLASSES  
EMITTER  
R
1
3
L
AVR  
AUDIO  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
O
R
L
R
AUDIO  
Net
ut  
OUTPUT  
Any Connection  
Type  
HDMI  
Cable  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
Source  
Device  
A/V  
Receiver  
Optional analog or  
digital audio  
TV  
connection  
The A/V receiver’s remote control key for the input must  
have been “learned” previously using “Setup to Control  
Automatic Audio and Video Switching via HDMI” on this  
page.  
1. Set up NetCommand control of A/V receiver audio/  
video switching via HDMI as described on this  
page.  
A/V receiver  
with HDMI  
output  
L
R
HDMI OUT  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
2. Press BACK to close any open menus and return to  
normal TV viewing.  
VCR  
3. Press ACTIVITY  
.
High-definition  
DVD player  
4. Highlight the icon for the A/V receiver input you  
wish to control.  
DVD player  
5. Press ENTER to switch the TV to the A/V receiver  
Cable box  
and the A/V receiver to the device.  
6. Open the Inputs > Learn menu.  
7. Perform NetCommand “learning” for the device by  
following the steps in “Initial NetCommand Setup,”  
page 47.  
Multiple video inputs through a single HDMI cable. You can  
connect multiple video devices to an A/V receiver that has  
an HDMI output. The optional audio connection allows you  
to hear, through the A/V receiver, devices connected to the  
TV only, e.g., an antenna on the ANT input.  
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56  
Appendices  
Appendix A: Bypassing the Parental Lock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control . . . . . . . . . . . 59  
Appendix C: HDMI Control of CEC Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66  
Appendix D: TV Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72  
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Appendices  
57  
Mitsubishi DLP Projection TV  
Appendix A: Bypassing  
the Parental Lock  
C9 Series  
737 Series  
837 Series  
Bypassing the Parental Lock  
After you set the lock, you must use your pass code to:  
View a locked program  
View the locked TV  
Cancel the lock  
Enter the Lock menus  
If you forget your pass code, you can view the locked  
TV without entering your pass code. When prompted  
for the pass code, press the number  
9
and  
(LAST)  
keys on the TV remote control at the same time. This  
process temporarily unlocks the TV.  
When entering the Lock menu, you are prompted to  
enter a pass code.  
To change the pass code, press  
9
and  
(LAST)  
at the same time. Either enter a new pass code to  
open the Lock menu and make changes or press  
BACK to close the menu.  
If any of the locks are turned on and you exit the  
menus when prompted for a new code, the old  
code and all lock settings are retained.  
If all locks are turned off and you exit the menus  
when prompted for a new code, then the previous  
code is erased.  
IMPORTANT  
When changing or deleting your pass code,  
you must use the remote control included  
with this TV. You cannot use a Mitsubishi  
remote control from another component or a  
“universal” remote.  
IMPORTANT  
Cut along the dotted line and file bypass  
instructions in a safe place for future  
reference.  
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Appendices  
This page intentionally left blank  
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Appendices  
59  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control  
This appendix explains programming the TV’s remote  
control to operate other A/V devices. This is distinct  
from NetCommand control.  
VCRs and DVRs  
CHANNEL UP/DN  
POWER  
SLEEP (from MORE menu)  
(
(
(
RECORD  
REVERSE  
STOP  
)
)
)
Functions Available for Other A/V Devices  
(
(
(
FAST FORWARD  
PAUSE  
PLAY  
)
GUIDE (DVR only)  
MENU (DVR only)  
0–9 Number Buttons  
The TV’s remote control can be programmed to operate  
other types and brands of A/V products. The functions  
performed in each switch position vary depending on  
the product. Not all functions work for all models. The  
most common functions available are listed on this  
page.  
)
)
Mitsubishi VCRs are compatible with some additional keys.  
Cable Boxes and Satellite Receivers  
(not all functions for all models)  
PAGE UP/DOWN  
CANCEL  
CHANNEL UP/DN  
ENTER  
GUIDE  
POWER  
The record/playback keys:  
(
(
(
(
(
(
FAST FORWARD  
PAUSE  
PLAY  
RECORD  
REVERSE  
STOP  
)
)
)
)
)
ACTIVITY  
TV modes  
GUIDE  
MENU  
INFO  
BACK  
)
LAST (ENTER; for chan-  
nels on some models)  
0–9 Number Keys  
A/V Receivers  
MUTE  
POWER  
SLEEP (from MORE menu)  
VOLUME  
0–9 Number Buttons  
Direct Input Selection  
buttons: numbers  
and LAST (on some  
Mitsubishi models)  
To use the remote after  
programming, press the side  
button to change the control  
mode to match the device  
type.  
CD Players  
(not all functions for all models)  
SLEEP (from MORE menu)  
(
(
REVERSE  
STOP  
)
(
(
(
FAST FORWARD  
PAUSE  
PLAY  
)
The MORE Menus  
The MORE key displays a menu showing additional key  
functions available for a device type after programming  
the remote control.  
)
)
0–9 Number Buttons  
)
DVD Players  
(not all functions for all models)  
CANCEL (on some  
models)  
CHANNEL UP/DN (for  
track skip on some  
models)  
ENTER  
MENU  
(
(
(
(
(
(
FAST FORWARD  
PAUSE  
PLAY  
RECORD  
REVERSE  
STOP  
)
)
)
)
)
)
0-9 Number Keys  
POWER  
SLEEP (from MORE menu)  
IMPORTANT  
Some manufacturers may change their  
products or they may use more than one  
remote control system. The TV’s remote  
control may be unable to operate your A/V  
equipment in these cases.  
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60  
Appendices  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control, continued  
Programming the Remote Control  
Mode  
Device Type  
Code  
1. Press the side button on the remote control to  
change to the correct mode for the product you  
want to control. Refer to the table below. Only  
one of each device type can be controlled in each  
mode.  
CABLE/SAT  
VCR  
DVD  
AUDIO  
Mode  
Affected Device  
IMPORTANT  
CABLE/SAT  
Cable Box  
DTV Receiver  
Satellite Receiver  
You may need to reprogram the remote control after  
changing the batteries. Record the codes for each  
mode in the space provided to make this faster.  
VCR  
VCR  
DVR  
DVD Player/Recorder  
Code Verification  
To determine the code programmed for any mode:  
1. Set the mode to the one you wish to verify.  
2. Press and hold POWER on the remote control for  
several seconds until the mode indicator blinks twice  
and goes off.  
DVD  
DVD Player/Recorder  
DVR  
VCR  
AUDIO  
A/V Receiver  
Audio Amplifier  
CD Player  
3. Press keys  
9
9
0
4. Press and count the blinks of the power key.  
1
2. Press and hold POWER on the remote control for  
several seconds until the mode indicator blinks  
twice and goes off.  
Write down the number of blinks as the first digit of  
the code.  
5. Repeat step 4 for the second, third, fourth, and fifth  
3. Release the POWER key.  
digits of the code.  
4. Enter the first five-digit code listed for your equip-  
ment.  
The mode indicator blinks twice when you  
start to enter the code and then once for each  
additional keypress.  
Audio Lock: Universal A/V Receiver  
Control  
With Audio Lock enabled, the remote control operates  
volume and mute on the A/V receiver in all modes set by  
the side button. Activate Audio Lock if you normally use  
an A/V receiver with your TV and other A/V equipment.  
The mode indicator blinks twice when you finish  
entering a valid code.  
If you need to start over or wish to exit pro-  
gramming mode, temporarily change to a  
different mode using the side button.  
1. Program AUDIO mode for your A/V receiver as  
described in “Programming the Remote Control” on  
this page.  
5. Point the remote control at the equipment and  
press POWER. If the product has no power on/off  
2. With the remote control in AUDIO mode, hold POWER  
on the remote control for several seconds until the  
mode indicator blinks twice and goes off.  
function, press a different key, such as  
(PLAY),  
(
STOP), VOLUME UP, or MUTE.  
If the equipment responds, the remote control  
is properly programmed.  
3. Press keys  
9
9
3
ENTER  
The mode indicator will blink twice to indicate Audio  
Lock is active.  
If the equipment does not respond, repeat  
steps 2–4 with the next five-digit code listed for  
your equipment.  
To Reset the Remote Control to Operate Volume  
and Mute for the TV Speakers  
6. Once you have found the correct code, write it in  
the space below for future reference.  
1. Press and hold POWER for several seconds until the  
mode indicator blinks twice and goes off.  
2. Press keys  
9
9
3
VOLUME UP.  
The mode indicator will blink four times to indicate  
Audio Lock has cleared.  
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Appendices  
61  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control, continued  
Programming Codes  
Audio Amplifiers  
Cable Boxes  
Paragon  
Penney  
CD Players  
Parasound 40420  
Penney  
Philips  
Pioneer  
Proceed  
Quasar  
RadioShack 40420, 40180, 40000  
RCA  
Realistic  
Adcom  
41100, 40577  
10525, 10008, 10000  
10000  
Altec Lansing 41742  
40029  
40626  
41087  
40420  
40029  
Bel Canto  
Design  
Bose  
Carver  
Cary Audio  
Design  
41583  
Philips  
Pioneer  
11305  
11877, 10877, 10533,  
10144  
40674  
40892  
41879  
Pulsar  
Quasar  
Runco  
10000  
10000  
10000  
40420  
40420, 40180, 40087,  
40000  
40435  
40420  
Samsung  
Scientific  
Atlanta  
Sejin  
10144  
Classe  
Flextronics  
Halcro  
Harman/  
Kardon  
JVC  
41461  
41879  
41934  
40892  
11877, 10877, 10477,  
10237, 10008, 10000  
11602  
Roksan  
Rotel  
Sansui  
Sanyo  
Sharp  
Sherwood  
Sony  
40000  
Sony  
11006  
40087, 40000  
40180, 40037  
41950, 40180  
41364, 40490, 40185,  
40100, 40000  
Sprucer  
Toshiba  
US Elec-  
tronics  
Videoway  
Zenith  
10144  
10000  
10008  
40331  
Krell  
41837  
40892  
41802, 41145  
40892  
41483  
Left Coast  
Lexicon  
Marantz  
Mark  
10000  
10899, 10525, 10000  
Symphonic 40180  
Tascam  
TDK  
40420  
41208  
40490, 40420, 40180  
40029  
40072  
40087  
41292, 40490, 40036  
40000  
Levinson  
Parasound  
Philips  
Polk Audio  
Victor  
CD Players  
Acoustic  
Research  
Akai  
Burmester  
California  
Audio Labs  
DKK  
Fisher  
Garrard  
Hafler  
Harman/  
Kardon  
Inkel  
41934  
40892  
40892  
40331  
40354  
40420  
Teac  
Technics  
Victor  
Wards  
Yamaha  
Yorx  
40083  
40420  
40029  
Yamaha  
Cable Boxes  
A-Mark  
ABC  
10144, 10008  
10237, 10008  
10237  
40000  
40000  
40420  
40173  
41202, 40173, 40100,  
40083  
40180  
A/V Receivers  
ADC  
Aiwa  
40531  
Acorn  
41641, 41405, 41388,  
41243, 40189, 40121  
41390  
41077  
41609, 41074  
41189  
Action  
Active  
10237  
10237  
Alco  
Americast 10899  
AMC  
Anam  
Arcam  
Audiotronic 41189  
Audiovox  
Bose  
Amino  
Archer  
11822, 11602  
10237  
Integra  
JVC  
Kenwood  
40101  
Bell South 10899  
41294, 40072  
40626, 40190, 40037,  
40029, 40000  
41711, 41318  
41317  
41208  
40038  
40626, 40435, 40180,  
40038, 40029  
41703  
Century  
Cisco  
Comcast  
Digeo  
10008  
11982, 11877, 10877  
11982  
41390  
41933, 41841, 41629,  
41253, 41229, 40639  
40189  
KLH  
Koss  
LG  
Magnavox  
Marantz  
12187  
Director  
GE  
10476  
10144  
10476  
Cairn  
Capetronic 40531  
Carver  
General  
Instrument  
GoldStar  
Hitachi  
i3 Micro  
Insight  
41289, 41189, 40189,  
40121  
40014  
10144  
10008  
11602  
10476  
Curtis  
McIntosh  
MCS  
Memorex  
MGA  
Miro  
Mitsubishi  
Modulaire  
Mathes  
Daewoo  
Denon  
40029  
40420, 40000  
40083  
41250  
41360, 41306, 41142,  
40121  
40531  
41801  
Jerrold  
Memorex  
Motorola  
Myrio  
10476  
10000  
11376, 11254, 10476  
11822, 11602  
40000  
Emerson  
Fisher  
Grundig  
Harman/  
Kardon  
Hitachi  
40098, 40083  
40420, 40180, 40087,  
40000  
40420  
41208  
41327, 40101  
40420, 40087, 40037,  
40000  
40189  
Nova Vision 10008  
41306, 41304, 41289,  
40891, 40189, 40110  
41801  
42169, 41893, 41077,  
41030  
MTC  
NAD  
Onkyo  
Optimus  
Novaplex  
Pace  
10008  
11877, 10877, 10237,  
10008  
Insignia  
Panasonic 11982, 10144, 10008,  
10000  
Panasonic  
40752, 40388, 40029  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
62  
Appendices  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control, continued  
Programming Codes, continued  
A/V Receivers  
A/V Receivers  
Satellite Receivers  
Integra  
41805, 41320, 41298,  
Technics  
Thorens  
Toshiba  
Venturer  
Wards  
41518, 41308  
41189  
41788, 41123, 40842  
41390  
40189, 40014  
41815, 41476, 41376,  
41375, 41331, 41276,  
41176, 41023, 40176  
41921  
SKY  
Sony  
Thomson  
Tivo  
10099  
11640, 11639, 10639  
10566, 10392  
11442, 11142  
40842  
JBL  
JVC  
41306, 40110  
42331, 41643, 41495,  
41374, 41282, 41058  
41390  
41570, 41569, 41313  
41428, 41390  
42197, 41293  
Toshiba  
11749, 10790, 10749  
Yamaha  
UltimateTV 11640, 11392  
Kawasaki  
Kenwood  
KLH  
Uniden  
Zenith  
10722  
11856, 11810  
LG  
YBA  
VCRs  
A-Mark  
Linn  
Magnavox  
40189  
Zenith  
41293  
20278, 20046, 20037,  
20000  
41514, 41269, 41266,  
41189, 40531, 40189  
41289, 41269, 41189,  
40891, 40189  
41289  
Satellite Receivers  
Bell ExpressVu 11170, 10775  
ABS  
Accurian  
Admiral  
21972  
20000  
20479, 20209, 20060,  
20048, 20047, 20039  
Marantz  
Chaparral  
10216  
Crossdigital 11109  
McIntosh  
DirecTV  
11856, 11749, 11640,  
Micromega 41189, 40189  
Adventura 20037, 20000  
11639, 11609, 11442,  
11414, 11392, 11377,  
11142, 11109, 10819,  
10749, 10639, 10566,  
10392, 10247, 10099  
11775, 11505, 11170,  
10775  
Mitsubishi  
41957, 41922, 41921,  
Aiko  
Aiwa  
Akai  
Alba  
Alienware  
Allegro  
America  
Action  
American  
High  
20278  
41920, 41393  
41189  
41313  
41905, 41805, 41320,  
41298, 40842  
20124, 20037, 20000  
20242, 20175  
20278, 20209  
21972  
20039  
20278  
Myryad  
Nakamichi  
Onkyo  
Dish  
Network  
System  
Dishpro  
Echostar  
Optimus  
41074, 41023, 40531,  
40121, 40014  
11775, 11505, 10775  
11775, 11505, 11170,  
10775  
Panasonic  
42967, 41764, 41763,  
41633, 41548, 41518,  
41509, 41316, 41308,  
41288, 41275  
20081, 20035  
Amstrad  
Astra  
Audiovox  
Avis  
20000  
20035  
20278, 20038, 20037  
20000  
Expressvu 11775, 10775  
Fortec Star 11821  
Philips  
41269, 41266, 41189,  
40891, 40531, 40189  
41935, 41384, 41123,  
41023, 40630, 40531,  
40150, 40014  
Funai  
GE  
11377  
10566  
Pioneer  
Bell &  
Howell  
Bell  
20479, 20048, 20046,  
20039, 20035, 20000  
21944  
GOI  
11775, 10775  
11250, 10819, 10749  
10775  
11775, 10775  
11749, 11442, 11142,  
10749  
Hitachi  
Houston  
HTS  
Hughes  
Network  
Systems  
Humax  
Innova  
JVC  
Polaroid  
41508  
ExpressVu  
Broksonic 20479, 20209, 20184,  
20121  
Polk Audio 41289, 40189  
Proscan 41254  
RadioShack 41609  
Calix  
20037  
20038, 20037  
20035  
20081, 20035  
20278  
RCA  
41609, 41511, 41390,  
Candle  
Canon  
Carver  
CCE  
11790, 11781  
10099  
11775, 11170, 10775  
11414  
41254, 41123, 41074,  
41023, 40531  
41609, 40121  
40189  
Realistic  
Revox  
Rio  
LG  
Cineral  
Citizen  
20278  
Magnavox 10722  
Mitsubishi 10749  
41869  
20479, 20278, 20209,  
20037, 20035, 20000  
20037  
Samsung  
Sansui  
Sanyo  
41500, 41304, 41295  
41189, 40189  
41801  
Netsat  
10099  
Classic  
Panasonic 10701, 10247  
Colortyme 20278, 20060, 20045,  
20035  
Pansat  
Philips  
11807  
Sherwood  
Sherwood  
Newcastle  
42169, 41905, 41077  
42169  
11749, 11442, 11142,  
10775, 10749, 10722,  
10099  
Colt  
Craig  
20000  
20047, 20037  
20000  
20081, 20035, 20000  
20278  
20432, 20278, 20162,  
20060, 20035, 20000  
Sonic Blue 41869  
Sony 41858, 41822, 41759,  
Criterion  
Crosley  
Crown  
Curtis  
Mathes  
Proscan  
10566, 10392  
RadioShack 10775, 10566  
41758, 41658, 41622,  
41558, 41441, 41382,  
41258, 41131, 41058  
RCA  
11442, 11392, 11142,  
10855, 10775, 10566,  
10392, 10143  
11609, 11442, 11377,  
11276, 11142, 11109  
Stereophonics 41023  
CyberPower 21972  
Daewoo 20278, 20046, 20045,  
20037  
Samsung  
Sunfire  
Teac  
41313  
41390, 41074  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Appendices  
63  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control, continued  
Programming Codes, continued  
VCRs  
Daytron  
Dell  
Denon  
DirecTV  
Dish  
Network  
System  
Dishpro  
Dual  
VCRs  
HTS  
VCRs  
20278, 20037  
21972  
20081, 20042  
20739  
21944  
20739, 20042  
Nikkodo  
Niveus  
Media  
Northgate 21972  
Olympus  
Onkyo  
20278, 20037  
21972  
Hughes  
Network  
Systems  
Humax  
Hush  
Hytek  
iBUYPOWER 21972  
Instant  
Replay  
Jensen  
JVC  
21944  
20162, 20035  
20222  
21062, 21048, 20593,  
20432, 20162, 20048,  
20047, 20037, 20035,  
20000  
20479, 20278, 20209,  
20184, 20121, 20000  
20035  
21988, 21797, 20739  
21972  
20047, 20000  
Optimus  
21944  
20000  
20035  
Durabrand 20039, 20038  
Dynatech  
Echostar  
Electrohome 20209, 20060, 20043,  
20037, 20000  
Electrophonic 20037  
Emerald  
Emerex  
Emerson  
20000  
21944  
20067  
Orion  
21944, 20067  
20278, 20037  
20067, 20046, 20038  
20037, 20035  
20000  
20038, 20037  
21972  
20038, 20000  
20081  
20000  
20278  
20046  
20067, 20042, 20037,  
20000  
KEC  
Panama  
Kenwood  
Kodak  
KTV  
Panasonic 21062, 20616, 20614,  
20225, 20162, 20035,  
20000  
20184, 20121  
20032  
21593, 20593, 20479,  
20278, 20209, 20184,  
20121, 20043, 20037,  
20000  
LG  
Penney  
20162, 20081, 20067,  
20047, 20042, 20038,  
20037, 20035, 20000  
20042  
20479, 20209, 20081,  
20035, 20000  
21181, 21081, 20739,  
20618, 20616, 20209,  
20162, 20081, 20048,  
20045, 20035, 20000  
20037  
20162, 20081, 20067,  
20042  
Linksys  
Lloyd’s  
Loewe  
Logik  
Lumatron  
Luxor  
LXI  
Pentax  
Philco  
Expressvu 21944  
Fisher  
20047, 20046, 20039,  
20000  
20035, 20033  
20000  
21593, 20593, 20278,  
20037, 20000  
20000  
21972  
20060, 20048, 20035,  
20000  
20060  
20278, 20037, 20000  
21593  
Philips  
Fuji  
Fujitsu  
Funai  
Magnasonic 20593, 20278, 20037,  
20000  
Magnavox 21593, 20618, 20593,  
20563, 20081, 20048,  
20039, 20037, 20035,  
20000  
Marantz  
Marta  
Matsui  
Matsushita 20162, 20081, 20035  
Media  
Center PC  
MEI  
Memorex  
Pilot  
Pioneer  
Garrard  
Gateway  
GE  
Polk Audio 20081  
Portland  
Presidian  
Proscan  
Protec  
Pulsar  
Quarter  
Quartz  
20278  
21593  
20060  
20000  
20278, 20039  
20046  
20047, 20046, 20035  
20162, 20035  
20081, 20038, 20035  
20037  
20209, 20037  
Gemini  
Genexxa  
GFM  
Go Video  
GOI  
21972  
20614, 20432  
21944  
20278, 20039, 20038,  
20037, 20035, 20000  
GoldStar  
20035  
Quasar  
20479, 20278, 20209,  
20162, 20048, 20047,  
20046, 20039, 20037,  
20035, 20000  
20037  
20060, 20043  
21972  
21972  
RadioShack 20162, 20048, 20047,  
20046, 20037, 20035,  
20000  
Radix  
Randex  
RCA  
Goodmans 20278, 20081, 20037,  
20000  
Gradiente  
Granada  
Grundig  
Harley  
Davidson  
Harman/  
Kardon  
20000  
20081, 20042  
20081  
20037  
20037  
Metz  
MGA  
Microsoft  
Mind  
Minolta  
Mitsubishi 20443, 20242, 20214,  
20173, 20075, 20067,  
20880, 20060, 20048,  
20045, 20042, 20035,  
20000  
20278, 20162, 20121,  
20048, 20047, 20046,  
20037, 20035, 20000  
20616, 20614  
20000  
20081, 20075, 20038  
20042  
Realistic  
Headquarter 20046  
Hewlett  
Packard  
HI-Q  
21972  
20060, 20048, 20047,  
20043, 20042, 20000  
20048, 20035  
20000  
20000  
20039, 20000  
20067, 20038  
20278, 20037  
ReplayTV  
Ricavision 21972  
Runco  
Salora  
20047, 20035, 20000  
20089, 20045, 20042,  
20037, 20035, 20000  
21972  
Motorola  
MTC  
MTX  
Multitech  
NEC  
Nikko  
20039  
20075  
20739, 20432, 20060,  
20045, 20038, 20000  
20048, 20039  
Hitachi  
Samsung  
Howard  
Computers  
HP  
Sanky  
21972  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
64  
Appendices  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control, continued  
Programming Codes, continued  
VCRs  
Sansui  
VCRs  
Touch  
Trix  
DVD and Blu-ray Players  
20479, 20209, 20067,  
20000  
20479, 20159, 20047,  
20046, 20000  
20184, 20121, 20045,  
20043  
20209, 20162, 20067,  
20060, 20048, 20047,  
20046, 20045, 20043,  
20042, 20039, 20037,  
20035, 20033, 20000  
20848, 20048, 20047,  
20032, 20000  
21972  
20037  
20278, 20045  
20045  
20184, 20038  
B & K  
BBK  
30662, 30655  
31224  
Ultra  
Bel Canto  
Design  
31571  
Sanyo  
Scott  
Sears  
Vector  
Vector  
Research  
Victor  
Video Con- 20242, 20045  
cepts  
Videomagic 20037  
Videosonic 20000  
Viewsonic 21972  
Blaupunkt 30717  
Blue Parade 30571  
20067  
Blue Sky  
Bose  
Brandt  
30699, 30695  
32023, 31895  
30651  
Broksonic 30695  
California  
Audio Labs  
Celestial  
Centrex  
Cinea  
30490  
Sharp  
Villain  
Voodoo  
Wards  
20000  
21972  
31020  
31004, 30672  
30831  
Shintom  
Siemens  
Signature  
20039, 20000  
20037  
20479, 20060, 20048,  
20046, 20037, 20035,  
20000  
20479, 20081, 20060,  
20048, 20047, 20046,  
20045, 20043, 20042,  
20038, 20037, 20035,  
20033, 20000  
CineVision 30869, 30833  
Citizen  
32116, 31587, 31277,  
31003, 30695  
30571  
31351, 31177, 31165,  
31107, 31086, 31077,  
30852, 30778  
30831  
Clairtone  
Coby  
Singer  
20037  
Wharfedale 20593  
White  
Westinghouse 20000  
World  
XR-1000  
Yamaha  
Zenith  
Sonic Blue 20616, 20614  
Sonographe 20046  
Sony  
20479, 20278, 20209,  
21972, 21032, 20636,  
Craig  
20479, 20209  
20035, 20000  
20038  
21139, 20479, 20278,  
20209, 20039, 20037,  
20033, 20000  
21972  
20067, 20047, 20046,  
20035, 20033, 20032,  
20000  
Creative  
Curtis  
30539, 30503  
31087  
Mathes  
Soundmaster 20000  
Stack 9  
STS  
SV2000  
SVA  
Sylvania  
CyberHome 31537, 31502, 31129,  
31117, 31024, 31023,  
21972  
20042  
20000  
20000  
21593, 20593, 20081,  
20043, 20035, 20000  
30874, 30816  
30705  
ZT Group  
Cytron  
DVD and Blu-ray Players  
Daewoo  
31242, 31234, 31172,  
31169, 30869, 30833,  
30784, 30770, 30705  
30770  
30872  
30770  
32258, 30634, 30490  
30778  
31407  
3D LAB  
Accurian  
Acoustic  
Solutions  
Adcom  
Afreey  
30539, 30503  
31416, 30675  
30730  
Symphonic 21593, 20593, 20000  
Systemax  
Tagar  
Systems  
Tandy  
Tashiko  
Tatung  
Dansai  
Daytek  
Decca  
Denon  
Denver  
Desay  
21972  
21972  
31094  
30698  
20000  
20037  
Aiwa  
Akai  
30641, 30533  
31089, 30770, 30705,  
30695  
30717, 30672  
30790  
20081, 20067, 20048,  
20000  
20067, 20000  
20162, 20037, 20035,  
20000  
20037, 20035, 20000  
20479  
20000  
20060  
20278  
21944, 20739, 20636,  
20618  
20000  
DigitalMax 31738  
Alba  
Alco  
Digitrex  
Disney  
DiViDo  
Dual  
30672  
31270, 30675  
30705  
Teac  
Technics  
Allegro  
Amphion  
Media  
Works  
AMW  
Apex Digital 31061, 31056, 31020,  
31004, 30797, 30796,  
30794, 30755, 30717,  
30672, 30533  
30869  
30872  
31068, 30675  
Teknika  
Tevion  
Thomas  
Thomson  
Tisonic  
Tivo  
Durabrand 31127, 31023  
DVD2000 30521  
Electrohome 32116, 31003  
30872  
Emerson  
31268, 30675, 30591  
Enterprise 30591  
Entivo  
Enzer  
ESA  
Firstline  
Fisher  
Funai  
Gateway  
GE  
30539, 30503  
30770  
31268  
30651  
TMK  
TNIX  
Toshiba  
Arrgo  
31023  
31168, 31407  
20037  
Aspire  
Digital  
Astar  
Audiovox  
Awa  
21988, 21972, 21008,  
20209, 20045, 20043,  
20000  
30670  
31268, 30675  
31158, 31077, 31073  
30815, 30717, 30522  
31489  
31041, 30790, 30717  
30730  
Tosonic  
Totevision 20037  
20278  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Appendices  
65  
Appendix B: Programming the Remote Control, continued  
Programming Codes, continued  
DVD and Blu-ray Players  
DVD and Blu-ray Players  
DVD and Blu-ray Players  
GFM  
Go Video  
31268, 30675  
Myryad  
NAD  
Naiko  
30894  
30741  
30770  
Sharp  
32250, 31256, 30752,  
31730, 31304, 31158,  
31144, 31099, 31075,  
31044, 30869, 30833,  
30783, 30744, 30741,  
30717, 30715, 30573  
30869, 30741  
30675, 30630  
31117  
Sharper  
Image  
NEC  
Nesa  
30869, 30785  
30717  
Sherwood 31077, 31043, 30770,  
30633  
Sherwood 31077  
Newcastle  
NexxTech  
Norcent  
31402  
31265, 31107, 31003,  
30872  
GoldStar  
Goodmans 30790  
Onkyo  
Oppo  
Optimus  
Oritron  
Palsonic  
31769, 30627, 30503  
31224, 30575  
30571  
30651  
30852, 30672  
GPX  
30769, 30699  
30651, 30490  
30717  
30705, 30539  
30702, 30582  
Shinsonic  
Slim Art  
SM Elec-  
tronic  
30839, 30533  
30784  
30730  
Gradiente  
Greenhill  
Grundig  
Harman/  
Kardon  
Sonic Blue 31099, 30869, 30783,  
30715, 30573  
Panasonic 31762, 31641, 30703,  
30632, 30571, 30503,  
30490  
Hello Kitty 30831  
Sony  
31536, 31533, 31516,  
31431, 31070, 31033,  
30864, 30533  
31074  
30860, 30717  
31268, 30675  
Hitachi  
Hiteker  
Humax  
iLo  
Initial  
Insignia  
Integra  
IRT  
30664, 30573  
30672  
31588, 31500  
31348  
30717  
32095, 31268, 30675  
31769, 30627, 30571  
30783  
Philco  
Philips  
30675  
32084, 32056, 31506,  
31354, 31340, 31267,  
31158, 30675, 30646,  
30539, 30503  
Sungale  
SVA  
Sylvania  
Symphonic 31268, 30675  
Phonotrend 30699  
PianoDisc 31024  
TAG  
30894  
McLaren  
Tatung  
Teac  
Technics  
Technika  
JBL  
JMB  
30702  
30695  
Pioneer  
31571, 31512, 31460,  
30770  
30632, 30631, 30571,  
30525, 30142  
31086, 31061, 31020  
30790, 30717, 30571  
30703, 30490  
30770  
JSI  
JVC  
31423  
31550, 31275, 31164,  
30867, 30623, 30558  
31049  
Polaroid  
Polk Audio 30539  
Technosonic 30730  
Tevion 30651  
Theta Digital 30571  
jWin  
Portland  
Presidian  
Proceed  
Proscan  
Prosonic  
ProVision  
Qwestar  
30770  
31738, 30675  
30672  
30522  
30699  
30778  
30651  
Kawasaki  
Kenwood  
KLH  
30790  
30534, 30490  
31149, 31020, 30790,  
30717  
Thomson  
Tivo  
Toshiba  
30522, 30511  
31588, 31512, 31503  
31769, 31608, 31588,  
31515, 31510, 31503,  
31154, 30695, 30573,  
30539, 30503  
30800  
Kloss  
Koss  
30533  
31423, 31061, 30769,  
30651  
Radionette 30741  
RadioShack 30571  
Lasonic  
Lecson  
Lenoxx  
LG  
30798, 30627  
31533  
31127  
30869, 30741, 30591  
31738, 31656, 31440,  
31416, 31158, 31058  
30741, 30511  
30783  
Tredex  
Unimax  
United  
RCA  
31769, 30822, 30790,  
30770  
30730  
30717, 30571, 30522  
30571  
30752  
Realistic  
Reoc  
Universum 30591  
Urban Con- 30539, 30503  
cepts  
LiteOn  
Revoy  
Rio  
Rotel  
30699  
30869  
31178, 30623  
31004  
Loewe  
Logix  
US Logic  
V
Venturer  
Vizio  
Wesder  
Xbox  
Yamaha  
30839  
31226, 31064  
30790  
31226, 31064  
30699  
32083, 30522  
30646, 30545, 30539,  
30497, 30490  
Magnasonic 30675, 30651  
Magnavox 31506, 31354, 31268,  
30675, 30646, 30539,  
30503  
Rowa  
Saba  
Sampo  
Samsung  
30651  
30752, 30698  
31075, 31044, 30820,  
30744, 30573, 30490,  
30199  
Marantz  
McIntosh  
Medion  
Memorex  
Microsoft  
Minato  
30675, 30539, 30503  
31533, 31273  
30651  
31270, 30831, 30695  
32083, 30522  
30752  
Sansui  
Sanyo  
30695  
30873, 30695, 30675,  
30670  
Yamakawa 30872  
Zenith  
30869, 30741, 30591,  
30503  
30784  
31265  
Schneider 30783  
Schwaiger 30752  
Zeus  
Zoece  
Mintek  
30839, 30717  
Mitsubishi 31521, 30521  
Mustek 30730  
Sensory  
Science  
31158  
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66  
Appendices  
Appendix C: HDMI Control of CEC Devices  
Many new HDMI devices have a feature called Con-  
sumer Electronics Control (CEC) or HDMI Control.  
HDMI Control allows one device, such as the TV, to  
control other devices, such as an A/V receiver or disc  
player. Use of CEC is optional.  
4. If prompted for a name,  
highlight the name you want  
to assign the device.  
Each manufacturer chooses which CEC functions to  
support so it is difficult to predict which devices and  
features are compatible with Mitsubishi’s HDMI Control.  
You may find that CEC functions for a specific device are  
limited.  
5. Highlight On.  
To use HDMI Control, you must enable it in both  
the TV and the device.  
7. Highlight EXIT and press ENTER to close the New  
In the TV. Enable HDMI control from the New  
Device Found screen or from the Inputs > HDMI  
Control menu.  
Device Found screen.  
Note: At any time after completing Auto Input Sens-  
ing, you can set the TV’s HDMI control on or off  
in the Inputs > HDMI Control menu.  
I
n the Device. Most devices with HDMI CEC com-  
patibility let you turn it on or off in the device menus,  
where it is typically listed as “HDMI Control.”  
If the New Device Found Screen  
Displays No HDMI Control Option  
If the New Device Found screen shows no option for  
HDMI Control, one of these conditions applies:  
Enabling HDMI Control of CEC Devices  
To ensure proper detection  
Power on HDMI devices before connecting them to  
the TV.  
HDMI Control is turned off in the menus of the  
new device  
Connect and set up HDMI devices one at a time.  
1. Power on the device and allow it to complete the  
Action:  
power-on sequence (boot up). Stop any playback.  
a. Highlight EXIT and press ENTER to close the  
New Device Found screen.  
b. Display the device’s setup menus and enable  
the device’s CEC capabilities.  
2. Connect the device to one of the TV’s HDMI inputs.  
3. When the TV detects the connection, the New  
Device Found screen will appear.  
c. Wait for the TV’s New Device Found screen  
to appear again.  
Note: See “If the New Device Found Screen Displays  
No HDMI Control Option” on this page if there is  
no HDMI Control option.  
d. If the New Device Found screen still has no  
HDMI Control option, power off the device.  
Power on the device and wait for the New  
Device Found screen to display with the  
HDMI Control option.  
The device does not have CEC compatibility  
Action:  
-
Control the device with its own remote  
control or program the TV’s remote control to  
operate the device.  
New Device Found screen with HDMI Control option.  
This screen displays only if the device’s HDMI Control is  
-
837 Series. Use the TV’s NetCommand IR  
control (page 45).  
enabled  
.
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Appendices  
67  
HDMI Control of an HDMI A/V  
Receiver and Connected Devices  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
Note: Connect the A/V receiver to the TV before con-  
AVR  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
HDMI  
VIDEO: 480i/480p/720p/1080i/1080p  
AUDIO: PCM STEREO  
DVI/PC  
AUD  
Optional  
R
PC: VGA, W-VGA, SVGA, W-SVGA,  
XGA, W-XGA, SXGA, 720p/ 1080p  
necting any other device to the A/V receiver.  
NetCommand
ut External  
/
oller Input  
digital audio  
connection  
HDMI  
2
ANT  
ANT  
2
1
/
/
AUX  
MAIN  
1
3
R
/ I
1. Enable HDMI Control for the A/V receiver as  
described in “Enabling HDMI Control of CEC  
Devices” on the opposite page.  
R
AUDIO  
L
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
TV back panel  
2. Power on the HDMI device you wish to connect to  
the A/V receiver (such as a disc player, cable box,  
or satellite receiver). Allow the device to complete  
the power-on sequence (boot up). Stop playback if  
the device starts playing.  
A/V receiver with  
HDMI output  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
OUTPUT  
HDMI OUT  
3. Connect the device to the A/V receiver with an  
HDMI cable.  
VCR  
4. Select the device’s HDMI input on the A/V receiv-  
High-definition  
DVD player  
er’s front panel controls or remote control.  
DVD player  
5. When the TV detects the connection, the New  
Device Found screen will appear.  
Cable box  
Note: If the TV is unable to detect the device, either  
the device’s CEC capability is not enabled or  
the device is not CEC compatible. Enable  
HDMI control through the device’s menus  
before continuing. You may need to temporar-  
ily connect the device directly to the TV to view  
device menus.  
Connecting HDMI devices. The optional digital audio  
connection allows you to hear audio through the A/V  
receiver from devices connected to the TV only.  
6. Highlight On.  
7. Highlight EXIT and press ENTER to close the New  
Device Found screen.  
8. Optional: Connect the TV’s DIGITAL AUDIO  
OUTPUT to an input on the A/V receiver. Use this  
additional connection if:  
You want the ability to switch between the A/V  
receiver speakers and the TV speakers.  
You want to use the A/V receiver to listen to  
devices connected to the TV only, e.g., an  
antenna input or camcorder.  
9. 837 Series. If desired, perform NetCommand IR  
Learning to supplement CEC functions. You must  
first connect and place IR emitters for the devices.  
See page 45.  
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68  
Appendices  
Resolving CEC Conflicts  
Using HDMI Control  
Because each manufacturer selects which CEC func-  
tions to support, some devices can conflict with other  
devices. If control conflicts arise, you can:  
As an example of using HDMI Control, press PLAY on  
the device itself to:  
Power on the TV  
Switch to the device (no need to display the  
Activity menu)  
Turn off TV control of an individual CEC-enabled  
device (see below).  
Begin play of the device  
Turn off CEC in the setup menu of one of the  
devices.  
Direct Keys  
Turning Off the TV’s HDMI Control of a CEC Device  
Test your equipment with the TV’s remote control to  
find additional supported commands. See the table  
below for commands that may be available, depending  
on the individual device.  
1. Press MENU on the TV remote control.  
2. Highlight Inputs > HDMI Control and press ENTER  
to open the menu.  
CEC-enabled VCR, DVD, and DVR functions that  
may be available:  
3. Move to the device name and press  
to select  
Off to turn off the TV’s ability to control the device.  
Record/  
Playback  
Menu  
Navigation  
4. Press MENU to clear the menu.  
Channel Tuning  
Other  
CHANNEL UP/DN  
GUIDE  
MENU  
ENTER  
Digits 0–9  
,
CANCEL  
CANCEL  
(to cancel)  
ENTER  
If you have a CEC-enabled A/V receiver, CEC-enabled  
devices connected to the A/V receiver with an HDMI  
cable may also be controllable. They can be selected  
from the TV’s Activity menu.  
Inputs > HDMI Control menu  
Removing an HDMI Device  
1. Power off the device.  
2. Disconnect the HDMI cable.  
CEC-enabled A/V receiver functions that may be  
available:  
Try the VOLUME UP/DOWN MUTE, and menu-navigation  
,
3. Press MENU on the TV remote control to enter the  
keys.  
TV main menu.  
To open the A/V receiver menu, follow these steps:  
4. Highlight Inputs > Name and press ENTER to open  
1. While watching TV, press MORE then (AUDIO).  
9
the menu.  
2. Press until the Speakers option displays.  
3. Press to select AVR as the source.  
4. Press MORE and then 1 (MENU) to display the  
menu.  
5. Select Delete from the HDMI input names.  
6. Press MENU to clear the menus.  
The MORE Menu  
Press MORE on the TV’s remote control to see a menu  
of additional supported functions for the current  
CEC-enabled device. To issue a command, press the  
number key indicated in the menu.  
Inputs > Name menu with Delete selected for HDMI-3.  
MORE key: Sample menu for  
a CEC-enabled DVD player  
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Appendices  
69  
Appendix D: TV Care  
Lamp-Cartridge Replacement and Cleaning  
CAUTION: If the television is on, press POWER to turn it off. Unplug the television and  
allow it to cool for at least one hour before attempting to replace the lamp cartridge.  
Lamp  
The light source for this television is a  
lamp, which is part of a lamp cartridge  
assembly. The life of the lamp can  
vary, based on the lamp itself, the air  
temperature around the TV while it is  
operating, the selected lamp mode, and  
your viewing patterns. Warmer air or  
poor ventilation shorten the lamp life,  
as does use of the Bright lamp mode  
and turning the television on and off  
CAUTION  
BURN DANGER! HOT SURFACES INSIDE!  
Touch lamp cartridge handle only. Do not touch lamp or lamp car-  
tridge housing. Keep lamp cartridge horizontal during removal. Do  
not tilt as glass may come out and cause injury. Replace lamp car-  
tridge only with the same part number 915B403001.  
frequently. Mitsubishi warrants the lamp for one (1) year from the date of  
original TV purchase at retail.  
WARNING  
THE ACCESS PANEL IS  
To Order a New Lamp  
PROVIDED WITH AN INTERLOCK  
TO REDUCE THE RISK OF  
EXCESSIVE ULTRAVIOLET  
RADIATION. DO NOT DEFEAT  
ITS PURPOSE OR ATTEMPT TO  
SERVICE WITHOUT REMOVING  
PANEL COMPLETELY.  
To Receive a Replacement Lamp Under Warranty  
Call (800) 553-7278. Please have model number, serial number,  
and TV purchase date available.  
Important: All lamps replaced under warranty must be returned to  
Mitsubishi where they will be inspected for defect verification.  
To Purchase a Replacement Lamp After Warranty  
Lamp Part Number 915B403001  
Lamp-Substitution Alert  
MDEA recommends that you use only genuine Replacement Lamp Assemblies purchased directly from Mitsubishi or a  
Mitsubishi Authorized Dealer or Mitsubishi Authorized Service Center. MDEA advises that replacement lamps obtained  
separately from the Lamp Cartridge and/or Lamp Assemblies obtained from unauthorized sellers may be incorrect for  
your television, may not fit or perform properly and may even damage your television. MDEA can not be responsible  
for the performance, reliability or safety of any replacement lamps that are obtained from unauthorized sources.  
WARNING  
Do not remove the lamp cartridge immediately after turning off the television. You may get burned because the  
lamp is very hot. Allow the television to cool for at least one hour before replacing the lamp cartridge.  
Do not remove the lamp cartridge except when replacing it. Careless treatment can result in injury or fire.  
Do not touch the lamp glass element. It may be very hot and break, causing injuries or burns.  
Be sure not to insert any metal or flammable object into the lamp cartridge opening, as it may cause fire or electrical  
shock. If a foreign object is inserted into the opening, unplug the AC cord of the TV and contact your dealer for service.  
Install the lamp cartridge securely. Failure to do so may cause a fire.  
Do not touch the lamp glass elements. Oils from your fingers may cause premature lamp failure.  
THE LAMP INSIDE THIS PRODUCT CONTAINS MERCURY AND MUST BE RECYCLED OR  
DISPOSED OF ACCORDING TO LOCAL, STATE OR FEDERAL LAWS. For disposal or recy-  
cling information, please contact your local authorities or the Electronic Industries Alliance at  
Hg  
= MERCURY  
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70  
Appendices  
Appendix D: TV Care, continued  
Lamp-Cartridge Replacement  
Removing the Old Lamp Cartridge  
1. Turn off TV power and unplug the TV. Allow the  
lamp to cool for at least one hour before proceed-  
ing.  
Figure 1  
2. After the lamp has cooled, remove the cover of the  
Figure 2  
lamp compartment, located on the back of the TV.  
Refer to figures 1 and 2. Use a #2 (medium) Phillips  
screwdriver to loosen the screw securing the cover.  
Keep the screw and cover for re-installation  
3. With a medium Phillips screwdriver, loosen the two  
screws securing the lamp cartridge until they dis-  
engage from the mating threads. These are captive  
screws and cannot be separated from the lamp  
cartridge.  
4. Fully open the bag supplied with the replacement  
Figure 3  
lamp and set the opened bag aside.  
5. Gently grasp the handle of the lamp cartridge and  
Use only replacement lamp part number  
915B403001.  
pull the old cartridge straight out. See figure 3.  
CAUTION: Do not tilt or rotate the cartridge, as  
small glass fragments may fall out.  
6. Without tilting or putting down the lamp cartridge,  
insert it into the opened bag. Close the bag while  
being careful not to let any glass particles fall out.  
Lamp-Cartridge Filter Cleaning  
If the TV shuts off after displaying the message “TV  
will shut down in a few seconds. Please check if the  
air flow is blocked” and/or the STATUS LED is yellow, the  
air filter may need cleaning. The air filter is part of the  
lamp cartridge. Use the following procedure to clean  
the filter.  
1. Remove the lamp cartridge from the TV as  
described under “Removing the Old Lamp Car-  
tridge.” Do not tilt or rotate the cartridge. Do not  
touch the glass parts of the lamp cartridge.  
Installing the New Lamp Cartridge  
1. Do not touch the glass parts of the new lamp car-  
tridge. Insert the new cartridge into the TV in the  
same orientation as the old cartridge. Push on the  
cartridge housing until it is fully seated.  
2. Gently tighten the screws with the screwdriver.  
AVOID OVERTIGHTENING!  
3. Replace the plastic cover and retaining screws.  
4. WASH YOUR HANDS THOROUGHLY, AS THIS  
2. Holding the lamp cartridge horizontal (do not tilt or  
rotate), use a soft dry brush or vacuum cleaner to  
remove any dust that may be present on the mesh  
filter. Do not use liquids. See figure 4.  
LAMP CONTAINS MERCURY.  
Disposal of the Old Lamp Cartridge  
Lamp under warranty: All lamps replaced under war-  
ranty must be returned to Mitsubishi. Use the return  
shipping label provided and send to Mitsubishi Digital  
Electronics, America, 625 Braselton Parkway, Suite 200,  
Braselton, GA 30517.  
3. Reinstall the lamp cartridge as described under  
“Installing the New Lamp Cartridge.”  
IMPORTANT: Lamps found to be without defect will  
be returned and charged back to the sender.  
Figure 4  
Lamp no longer under warranty: Contact your  
local authorities or the Electronic Industries Alliance at  
Do not dispose of the old lamp with common trash.  
Keep lamp  
cartridge horizontal  
and remove dust  
from the mesh filter  
using a vacuum  
cleaner or soft dry  
brush.  
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Appendices  
71  
Appendix D: TV Care, continued  
Cleaning Recommendations  
Care of the Remote Control  
Normally, light dusting with a dry, non-scratching duster  
will keep your TV clean. If cleaning beyond this is  
needed, please use the following guidelines:  
Remote Control Tips  
For longer life, use alkaline batteries.  
Do not mix old and new batteries.  
Be within 20 feet of the equipment.  
First, turn off the TV and unplug the power cord from  
the power outlet.  
Occasionally clean dust build-up from the air-intake  
grilles on the back and sides of the TV. Clean using a  
vacuum cleaner with a brush attachment.  
Do not press two or more keys at the same time  
unless instructed to do so.  
Do not allow the unit to get wet or become heated.  
Keep the unit out of direct sunlight.  
Top and Sides of the TV  
Gently wipe down your TV with a soft, non-abrasive  
cloth such as cotton flannel, microfiber, or a clean  
cloth diaper, lightly moistened with water. Dry with  
a second dry, soft, non-abrasive cloth.  
Avoid dropping on hard surfaces.  
Do not use harsh chemicals to clean. Use only a  
soft, lightly moistened cloth.  
Resetting the Remote Control  
For oily dirt, add a few drops of mild liquid deter-  
gent, such as dishwashing detergent, to the water  
used to moisten the cloth. Rinse with a second  
cloth moistened only with water. Dry with a third  
dry, soft, non-abrasive cloth.  
If TV mode is selected and the TV does not respond  
properly, reset the remote control.  
1. Press and hold POWER for several seconds until the  
mode indicator blinks twice and goes off.  
Screen  
2. Release the POWER key.  
Follow the instructions for the top and sides, wiping  
gently in an up and down motion.  
Clean the entire screen evenly, not just sections of  
the screen.  
Do not allow liquid to drip down the screen, as  
some liquid may enter the TV through the gap  
between the screen and screen frame.  
You may purchase Mitsubishi Screen Cleaner, part  
number CLEANER-VSS, by calling (800) 553-7278.  
3. Press keys  
0
0
9
3
5
and the mode indicator will  
blink twice when you finish entering the code.  
When entering the code, pause for a moment  
between each key press to ensure it is recognized.  
Low-Battery Indicator  
If you press a key and the mode indicator blinks five  
times, replace the remote control’s batteries.  
General Cleaning Precautions  
DO NOT allow liquid to enter the TV through the  
ventilation slots or any crevice.  
DO NOT use any strong or abrasive cleaners, as  
these can scratch the surfaces.  
DO NOT use any cleaners containing ammonia,  
bleach, alcohol, benzene, or thinners, as these can  
dull the surfaces.  
DO NOT spray liquids or cleaners directly on the  
TV’s surfaces.  
DO NOT scrub or rub the TV harshly. Wipe it gently.  
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72  
Appendices  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting  
channel (a channel from the ANT input, a cable box, or  
satellite receiver), first check other channels from the  
same input before changing settings. If most other  
channels from the same input seem correct, there is  
likely a problem with the broadcast rather than with the  
TV. Use care in this case, as changes you make to fix  
problems on individual channels also affect all other  
channels on the same input.  
TV Reset Comparison Guide  
You can resolve many common TV problems using  
the reset functions described in the following table.  
See also the troubleshooting suggestions later in this  
appendix.  
IMPORTANT  
Before you change sound or picture settings: If  
picture or sound settings seem wrong for a broadcast  
Reset Name  
Format  
When to Use  
How to Use  
Resulting Action  
When the picture  
shape seems  
incorrect, use  
MORE > 0 (FORMAT) to  
change the shape of  
the picture.  
Press the MORE key and then repeat- The last-used format for a signal  
edly press  
0
(FORMAT) to cycle  
type is memorized for each input.  
The next time the same input and  
the same signal type is viewed,  
the last-used format will be  
recalled.  
through the available aspect ratios.  
PerfectColor  
Reset  
or  
When the color  
intensities seem out  
of balance, use the  
1. While viewing the input to  
All PerfectColor/PerfecTint  
sliders are reset to the original  
center position. The PefectColor/  
PerfecTint settings for other  
inputs remain unchanged.  
be reset, press MENU and  
+
go to Adjust > Picture >  
PerfectColor / PerfectColor/PerfecTint  
PerfectColor.  
PerfecTint  
reset to reset the color  
balances to the original  
factory settings.  
Both PerfectColor and  
PerfecTint are reset at  
the same time.  
2. Press ENTER to display the  
Reset (837  
Series)  
PerfectColor adjustment screen.  
3. Press CANCEL to reset the colors.  
(for the single  
input currently  
being watched)  
A/V Memory  
Reset  
(for the single  
input currently  
being watched)  
When audio and/  
or video settings for  
a single input seem  
incorrect, use A/V  
Memory Reset to  
return the input to  
the original factory  
settings.  
1. While viewing the input to reset, All Audio and Video settings  
press MENU and go to Adjust >  
for the individual input are  
reset except for the Listen To,  
Language, audio Balance,  
Closed Caption, and Advanced  
Picture settings.  
Reset.  
2. Press ENTER to highlight the  
Reset icon.  
3. Press ENTER again to reset.  
Customer Support  
Service and Customer Support  
To order replacement or additional remote con-  
trols or lamp cartridges, visit our website at www.  
mitsuparts.com or call (800) 553-7278.  
Service  
If you are unable to correct a problem with your TV,  
consult your Mitsubishi dealer or Mitsubishi Con-  
sumer Relations at (800) 332-2119.  
For questions:  
Call Consumer Relations at 800-332-2119.  
DO NOT adjust any controls other than those  
described in this Owner’s Guide.  
DO NOT remove the protective back cover of  
your TV.  
Important  
All lamps replaced under warranty must be returned  
to Mitsubishi where they will be inspected for defect  
verification.  
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Appendices  
73  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting, continued  
Reset Name  
When to Use  
How to Use  
Resulting Action  
A/V Reset  
(for all inputs)  
To reset audio and  
video adjustments for  
all inputs to the original VOLUME DOWN at the same time.  
factory settings.  
While viewing the TV, press the  
control-panel buttons ACTIVITY and  
All Audio and Video settings are  
returned to the original factory  
settings, including Listen To,  
Language, audio Balance,  
Closed Captions, Format and  
Advanced Picture settings.  
Channel  
To erase and  
1. While viewing the TV, press  
All previously memorized chan-  
Memorization  
re-memorize channels  
on the ANT input.  
MENU to display the main menu. nels for the antenna input are  
2. Navigate to the Initial> Channel erased and a new set of memo-  
menu.  
3. Press ENTER.  
4. Highlight the reception mode,  
e.g. Ant Air.  
rized channels is created. To add  
or delete individual channels, see  
Initial > Channel > Edit menu  
instructions on page 39.  
5. Highlight Scan.  
6. Press ENTER to start channel  
memorization.  
Lock Menu  
Pass Code  
To change your Lock  
menu pass code  
See the cutout page from Appendix A, Allows establishment of a new  
page 57.  
code.  
Control-Panel  
Lock Release  
To re-enable the  
Press and hold the ACTIVITY button  
on the control panel for over eight  
seconds. This works even if the TV  
is powered off.  
Allows the control panel to be  
unlocked if the remote control is  
misplaced.  
control-panel buttons  
after activation of the  
Control-Panel Lock  
Auto Input  
Sensing for  
HDMI  
When connecting an  
HDMI device does  
not trigger Auto Input  
Sensing.  
1. Disconnect the HDMI device.  
2. Delete the HDMI input in the  
Inputs > Name menu (see page  
40).  
The New Device Found screen  
will display.  
3. Power on and connect the new  
device.  
System Reset  
If the TV does not turn Press and hold the POWER button on The TV will turn off and the green  
on or off, does not  
respond to the remote  
control or control-  
panel buttons, or has  
audio but no video.  
the control panel for ten seconds.  
LED will flash quickly for about  
one minute. When the green  
LED stops flashing, you may turn  
on the TV. The changes you  
made most recently, before using  
SYSTEM RESET, may be lost.  
TV Reset  
To reset all consumer- 1. While viewing the TV, press  
The TV will start the initialization  
process. The TV will then turn  
off and the front green LED will  
start flashing. When the LED  
stops flashing, you can turn on  
the TV again. All memory and  
settings outlined in this Owner’s  
Guide will need to be set again.  
IMPORTANT:  
Use this reset  
only if all other  
resets have been defaults.  
unsuccessful.  
accessible settings  
and all memories to  
the original factory  
MENU to display the TV main  
menu.  
2. With the main menu displayed,  
press number keys 1 2 3 to  
display the Reset menu.  
3. READ THE ON-SCREEN  
WARNING AND INSTRUC-  
TIONS.  
CAUTION: All owner-  
performed setups and  
adjustments will be  
erased.  
If you do not wish to use this  
reset, press BACK or MENU to  
back out.  
If you do wish to use the  
reset, press ENTER to erase  
all memories and settings.  
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74  
Appendices  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting, continued  
General TV Operation  
Symptom  
Remarks  
1. A fan is running even while the TV is powered The room is too warm. When the TV is off, internal components  
off.  
continue to draw power and must be cooled by the fan.  
2. The fan gets louder after the TV is shut off.  
Normal operation. The fan speeds up to cool the lamp quickly  
after the TV has been shut off.  
3. The TV remote control does not work.  
Check that the batteries are fresh and installed correctly.  
Check that the control mode on the remote is set to TV.  
Be no more than 20 feet from the TV when using the remote control.  
Program the remote control to operate the TV or other device.  
Reset the remote control.  
4. When I try to use the remote control, the  
Replace the batteries.  
POWER key blinks five times.  
5. TV does not respond to the remote control or  
to control-panel buttons and TV will not power  
on or off.  
Unplug the AC power cord for 10 seconds.  
Press and hold the POWER button on the control panel to  
perform system reset.  
6. When a device is selected from the Activity  
menu, the screen is blue or black (no signal  
source).  
Make sure the selected device is turned on.  
Begin play of the device.  
7. You have forgotten your Lock menu pass code. See “Bypassing the Parental Lock”, Appendix A.  
8. Rating restrictions are not working.  
Open the Lock > Parental Lock menu and:  
Verify that the ratings locks are active.  
Check the Lock Time/Unlock Time to check if rating restric-  
tions are disabled.  
Rating restrictions apply only to content on the ANT input.  
9. On-screen displays appear each time you  
Normal TV operation.  
change a function.  
10. A warning message appeared on screen  
stating, “TV will shut down in a few seconds.  
Please check if the air flow is blocked.”  
Internal TV temperature has exceeded proper levels. Cool  
the room.  
The TV has overheated. Clear blocked air vents and ensure  
at least four inches of clearance on all sides of the TV.  
Clean the air filter on the lamp cartridge.  
I have turned on CEC for my HDMI devices but  
control is erratic and I wish to disable it.  
First turn off the TV’s HDMI control for the specific device. Open  
the Inputs > HDMI Control menu, select the device, select Off.  
Disable CEC on the device itself. See the device’s instructions.  
If the problem persists, do the following:  
11.  
1. Disconnect the device from the TV.  
2. Reconnect the device to the TV and Auto Input Sensing will  
recognize the device with CEC disabled.  
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Appendices  
75  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting, continued  
TV Channels  
Symptom  
Remarks  
1. The TV takes several seconds to respond to  
It is normal for digital channels to take longer to tune in.  
Press ENTER after entering a channel number to avoid  
delays.  
channel changes.  
Use a 4-digit number for an over-the-air digital channel.  
Use a 6-digit number for digital cable channels if your cable  
service is able to recognize 6-digit channel numbers.  
2. You cannot access a channel.  
Use number keys instead of CHANNEL Up/Down.  
Be sure the channel you want to view is in memory.  
Check that the TV is switched to the correct device or  
antenna for that channel by pressing the ACTIVITY key.  
Make sure the Lock > Parent menu lock is set to Off.  
If you cannot tune to a virtual digital channel even though the  
TV has already memorized digital channels, tune to the physi-  
cal channel number used by the broadcaster. The virtual  
channel will then be automatically added to memory.  
You may be trying to tune to an analog channel that is no  
longer broadcasting.  
3. When ChannelView list is displayed, informa-  
Press INFO to update the display for the highlighted channel.  
Program information is displayed only for the currently tuned  
channel.  
tion appears incomplete  
Available information is sent from the broadcaster or cable  
provider. No other data is available.  
Make sure the TV clock is set correctly.  
TV Power On/Off  
Symptom  
Remarks  
1. TV takes an excessively long time to power  
When powered on, the TV needs time to boot up, just as a com-  
puter does. Also, the TV’s lamp requires a few moments to heat  
up to full brightness.  
on.  
2. You cannot program the TV to turn on auto-  
The TV may be locked.  
The clock may not be set.  
matically (Timer function)  
3. TV turned itself off and the light on the front  
Momentary power fluctuation caused the TV to turn off to  
prevent damage. Wait for the green light to stop flashing  
and turn the TV on again.  
panel started to blink.  
If the TV does not stay on, press the POWER button on the  
control panel for at least eight seconds to perform System  
Reset. If this happens frequently, obtain an AC line power  
conditioner/surge protector.  
An unusual digital signal may have been received, triggering a  
protection circuit. Wait for the light to stop flashing and turn TV  
on.  
4. TV will not power off.  
Press the POWER button on the control panel for ten seconds  
to perform System Reset.  
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76  
Appendices  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting, continued  
Picture  
Symptom  
Remarks  
1. Picture does not look like a high-definition  
Not all signals are high-definition signals. To receive high-defini-  
tion programming from your cable or satellite provider, you must  
subscribe to the provider’s high-definition service. Some over-  
the-air broadcasts are in high-definition and can be received with  
a high-quality antenna suited to your location.  
picture.  
2. TV has sound but no picture.  
Check that all video inputs are plugged in firmly.  
Press and hold the POWER button on the control panel for  
ten seconds to perform System Reset.  
3. Picture has become dimmer.  
The lamp is nearing the end of its life. Order a new lamp.  
Adjust picture brightness and contrast to maximum levels.  
Change Lamp Energy from Standard to Bright.  
4. There is a large black or gray rectangle on  
The TV’s analog closed captioning has been set to “text” mode  
in the Captions menu. Turn off because there is no text informa-  
tion being broadcast.  
the screen.  
5. You cannot view a picture when playing a  
Check your VCR’s owner’s guide for further troubleshooting.  
VHS tape.  
6. VCR or DVD player’s on-screen menus jitter Stop playback. Possible cause: Many VCRs and DVD players  
up and down.  
provide on-screen menus at only half-resolution that may  
appear to jitter up and down.  
7. When viewing a stopped VCR, white lines  
Turn off video mute for the VCR.  
Begin playing the tape.  
Change the VCR input from Line 1 to the VCR antenna input.  
are rolling on the screen.  
8. A color program appears as a black and  
white image, or the colors are dim, or the  
screen is black.  
The PerfectColor color balance has been incorrectly set. Reset  
the PerfectColor balance.  
9. Picture from an HDMI input is noisy (poor  
Upgrade a Category 1 (unmarked) HDMI cable to a Category 2  
high-speed HDMI cable.  
quality).  
10. The image from a computer appears dis-  
Normal TV operation. The TV does not correct distortion in  
the picture from a computer because the correction process  
may cut off the edges of the image.  
torted when viewed on the TV.  
The aspect ratio may be wrong for the image. Press MORE  
and then 0 (FORMAT) to change.  
Sound  
Symptom  
Remarks  
1. There is no sound even when the  
Check if the MUTE key is on.  
The TV’s “Listen to:” setting may be set to SAP (analog program  
from the ANT input).  
volume is turned up.  
Check that the Speakers option is set to TV to hear sound from the  
TV speakers. Sound may be being sent to one of the audio outputs  
for an A/V receiver or headphones.  
If using an A/V receiver, check that the Speakers option is set to AV  
Receiver to hear sound from the A/V receiver speakers.  
Press and hold the POWER button on the control panel for 10  
seconds to perform System Reset.  
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Appendices  
77  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting, continued  
Sound  
Symptom  
Remarks  
The TV’s “Listen to:” setting may be set to SAP (analog program from  
the ANT input)  
2. The sound does not match the screen  
picture.  
.
3. The sound from my A/V receiver does  
not match the screen picture (I should  
hear the correct audio from my A/V  
receiver).  
Check that DIGITAL AUDIO OUTPUT and/or AVR AUDIO  
OUTPUT on TV’s main panel is connected to the A/V receiver.  
Without this connection, devices connected only to the TV (and  
not the A/V receiver) can be heard only from the TV speakers.  
Note that this includes the ANT input, a device (such as a  
camcorder) connected to the convenience panel, and any other  
device sending audio to the TV only.  
If using a NetCommand-controlled A/V receiver, NetCommand  
may be selecting the wrong A/V receiver audio input. Check the  
A/V receiver’s NetCommand setup in the Inputs > AVR menu.  
If playing MP3 files from a USB device, check that the TV’s audio  
output is connected to the A/V receiver.  
4. Cannot select an audio-only device; it  
Plug an unused video plug into the Y/VIDEO jack to activate Auto  
Input Sensing and make the audio device selectable in the Activity  
menu.  
does not appear in the Activity menu.  
NetCommand IR Control (NetCommand-equipped models only)  
Symptom  
Remarks  
1. Cannot see the menu from the A/V Receiver.  
A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio-Only Switching  
The A/V Receiver is not connected to any video input of the  
TV. To check the A/V Receiver menu, temporarily plug into  
an unused input of the TV, such as Input 3. Exit the New  
Device Found screen and select Input 3 from the Activity  
menu. Press MENU on the A/V receiver’s remote control.  
A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio and Video Switching over  
HDMI  
Use the MENU key on the A/V receiver’s remote control.  
A/V Receiver with HDMI Control  
Switch the remote control to AUDIO mode. Press the  
MORE key and then 1 (Menu).  
2. NetCommand unable to learn specific device  
A/V Device does not use IR format for remote control  
signal. ITT and RF formats cannot be learned.  
Room lighting may affect the signal. Have the remotes very  
close (6 inches or less) to the TV during Learning.  
If learning a Mitsubishi remote control, make sure mode is  
not set to TV.  
Some, but not all, device key functions can be learned by  
NetCommand. For example, POWER and PLAY may be  
learned, but other functions may not.  
keys.  
The signal from the remote control may not be strong  
enough. Insert fresh batteries and try Learning again.  
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78  
Appendices  
Appendix E: Troubleshooting, continued  
NetCommand IR Control (NetCommand-equipped models only)  
Symptom  
Remarks  
3. The A/V receiver is the selected audio source • A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio-Only Switching  
but there is no sound.  
-
-
Check to see if the A/V Receiver power is turned on.  
With A/V receiver power turned on, redisplay the Activ-  
ity menu and press ENTER to allow NetCommand to  
correctly select the A/V Receiver input.  
-
Incorrect setup in the Inputs > AVR menu. Check the  
device connection assigned in the AVR menu.  
A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio and Video Switching over HDMI  
-
-
Check to see if the A/V Receiver power is turned on.  
If the device is connected only to the TV (e.g., on ANT  
or a front panel input), verify that the TV’s AUDIO  
OUTPUT is connected to the A/V receiver.  
-
The A/V receiver is not switching properly because  
you have not learned the IR codes for the A/V receiver  
inputs to which your devices are connected.  
4. There is no sound from the A/V receiver  
NetCommand A/V receiver setup for the DVD player or digital  
surround sound device or other device is not switching prop-  
for my DVD player or other surround sound  
device even though I learned the IR code for erly. See the owner’s guide and perform A/V receiver setup for  
the A/V receiver’s DVD input or other input.  
(A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio-Only Switch-  
ing)  
a digital surround sound device.  
5. There is no sound or picture from the A/V  
receiver for my DVD player or other device  
connected to the A/V receiver; the A/V  
receiver should be sending video to the TV  
over an HDMI cable.  
NetCommand A/V receiver setup is not switching audio and  
video inputs properly. See the owner’s guide.  
(
A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio and Video  
Switching over HDMI)  
6. I’ve selected my DVD player or other sur-  
round sound device in combination with the  
TV speakers but hear no sound from the TV  
speakers.  
A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio-Only Switching  
If you have only an audio connection from the device to the  
A/V receiver, a physical audio connection from the device  
to the TV is also required.  
-
Connect the left and right audio output from the device  
to the appropriate TV audio input. Now you can hear  
audio from the device through either the TV speakers or  
the A/V receiver.  
-
To switch audio sources, press MORE 9 (Audio), press  
to show the Speakers option, then press to  
select AV Receiver or TV.  
A/V Receiver Set Up for Audio and Video Switching over HDMI  
With your DVD player connected to the A/V receiver, only  
video is passed from the A/V receiver to the TV because of  
copy-protection restrictions on the HDMI signal  
7. I “learned” the RECORD key for my VCR/DVR Check that the VCR or DVR is receiving a signal directly from  
but when I pressed the RECORD key, the  
your cable box or satellite receiver.  
VCR/DVR did not record anything.  
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Trademark and License Information  
79  
Trademark and License Information  
LICENSOR’S SUPPLIERS DO NOT MAKE OR PASS ON TO END USER OR ANY OTHER THIRD PARTY, ANY  
EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTY OR REPRESENTATION ON BEHALF OF SUCH SUPPLIERS,  
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF NON-INFRINGEMENT, TITLE, MERCHANTABIL-  
ITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  
®
®
Digital Light Processing and DLP are registered trademarks of Texas Instruments.  
Manufactured under license from Dolby Laboratories. Dolby is a trademark of Dolby Laboratories.  
HDMIthe HDMI logo and High-Definition Multimedia Interface are trademarks or registered trademarks of HDMI  
Licensing LLC.  
The software in this TV is based in part on the work of the Independent JPEG Group, copyright © 1991-1998, Thomas  
G. Lane, all rights reserved.  
x.v.Color and the x.v.Color logo are trademarks of Sony Corporation.  
ChannelView™, DeepField™ Imager, Easy Connect™, NetCommand®, PerfectColor™, PerfecTint™, Plush 1080p®  
5G, SharpEdge™, Smooth120Hz™ are trademarks of Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America, Inc.  
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80  
Trademark and License Information  
Mitsubishi TV Software  
END-USER LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR EMBEDDED SOFTWARE  
IMPORTANT – READ CAREFULLY: This License Agreement is a legal agreement between you (either an individual or an entity) and  
Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America, Inc. (MDEA) for all software pre installed and/or provided along with this television (“Software”). By  
utilizing this television and Software, you agree to be bound by the terms of this License Agreement.  
The Software is protected by United States copyright laws and international treaty provisions, as well as other intellectual property laws  
and treaties. The Software is licensed, not sold.  
1.  
only with the Mitsubishi television model that included this owner’s guide and owned by you.  
2. RIGHTS AND LIMITATIONS.  
LICENSE GRANT. MDEA grants you a non-exclusive, non-transferable, limited right and license to use one copy of the Software  
Software Not for Resale. You may not resell or otherwise transfer for value the Software, except in conjunction with a sale of the TV that  
Software has been pre installed.  
Prohibition on Reverse Engineering, Decompilation and Disassembly. The Software contains trade secrets or other proprietary material  
in its human perceivable form and to protect them, you may not reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble, or otherwise reduce the  
Software to any human perceivable form, except to the extent that the foregoing restriction is expressly prohibited by applicable law.  
Separation of Components. The Software is licensed as a single product. Its component parts may not be separated for use on more  
than one TV.  
No Rental. You may not rent, lease, lend, or sublicense the Software.  
Trademarks. This License Agreement does not grant you any rights to any trademarks of MDEA.  
3.  
VIOLATIONS. You understand that any use, copying or transfer of the Software, except as permitted pursuant to this License,  
may subject you to serious criminal and civil penalties including damages and an award to MDEA of attorneys’ fees in connection with any  
violation of this License. You further understand that you may be held legally responsible for any copyright infringement or other violation  
of intellectual property rights that is caused, encouraged, or induced by your failure to abide by the terms of the License. This license  
is effective until terminated, and will terminate immediately without notice from MDEA or judicial resolution if you fail to comply with any  
provision of this License.  
4.  
COPYRIGHT. All title and intellectual property rights in and to the Software (including but not limited to any images, photographs,  
animations, video, audio, music, text, and “applets” incorporated into the Software), and any accompanying printed materials are owned  
by or licensed to MDEA. All title and intellectual property rights in and to the content which may be accessed through use of the Software  
is the property of the respective content owner and may be protected by applicable copyright or other intellectual property laws and  
treaties. This License Agreement grants you no rights to use such content, except that you own the media on which the Software is  
recorded, but MDEA and its licensors retain ownership of the Software itself. All rights not expressly granted are reserved by MDEA.  
5.  
EXPORT RESTRICTIONS. MDEA is licensing the Software for use within the United States. You agree that you will not  
export or re-export the Software. You specifically agree not to export or re-export the Software: (i) to any country to which the U.S. has  
embargoed or restricted the export of goods or services, which currently include, but are not necessarily limited to Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya,  
North Korea, Sudan, and Syria, or to any national of any such country, wherever located, who intends to transmit or transport the Software  
back to such country; (ii) to any person or entity who you know or have reason to know will utilize the Software in the design, development,  
or production of nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons; or (iii) to any person or entity who has been prohibited from participating in  
U.S. export transactions by any federal agency of the U.S. government. You warrant and represent that neither the BXA nor any other U.S.  
federal agency has suspended, revoked, or denied your export privileges.  
6.  
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY. EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS LICENSE OR IN THE LIMITED WARRANTY  
APPLICABLE TO THE TV, MDEA MAKES NO OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER REGARDING THE SOFTWARE  
AND HEREBY EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WITH  
RESPECT TO THE SOFTWARE. ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES  
OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE HEREBY EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMED BY MDEA. IN  
NO EVENT SHALL MDEA BE LIABLE TO YOU OR ANY THIRD PARTIES, IN CONTRACT, IN TORT OR OTHERWISE, FOR ANY  
DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND OR NATURE. BECAUSE SOME  
JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES, THE ABOVE LIMITATION MAY  
NOT APPLY TO YOU.  
7.  
LIMITATION OF LIABILITY. MDEA SHALL NOT, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES BE LIABLE TO YOU OR ANY THIRD  
PARTIES FOR ANY DAMAGES OF ANY NATURE, WHETHER INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR  
OTHERWISE, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, ANY CLAIMS FOR LOST PROFITS, LOSS OF GOOD WILL OR EXPENDITURES  
MADE OR COMMITTED FOR IN RELIANCE ON THE CONTINUATION OF THIS LICENSE. YOU AGREE THAT NEITHER MDEA’S  
BREACH OF THIS LICENSE NOR ITS FAILURE TO REPAIR A DEFECT, ERROR OR BUG SHALL CONSTITUTE A FAILURE OF THE  
ESSENTIAL PURPOSE OF THIS LICENSE. BECAUSE SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION  
OF LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, THE ABOVE LIMITATIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU. MDEA’s  
liability to you for direct damages for any cause whatsoever and regardless of the form of the action, will be limited to the money  
paid by you for the TV (based on fair market value of the TV) that caused the damages.  
8.  
GENERAL. This License Agreement will be governed by the laws of the State of California.  
WARNING: This product contains chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer and/or birth defects  
or other reproductive harm.  
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Warranty  
81  
Mitsubishi DLP Projection Television Limited Warranty  
MITSUBISHI DIGITAL ELECTRONICS AMERICA, INC. (“MDEA”) warrants as follows to the original purchaser of this  
television from an authorized MITSUBISHI Audio/Video Dealer, should it prove defective by reason of against defects  
arising from improper workmanship and/or material:  
a. Parts. The lenticular (i.e. front picture) screen is warranted against defects in materials and workmanship for a  
period of thirty (30) days from the date of the original purchase at retail. The lamp and all other parts (except any soft-  
ware incorporated into this television) are warranted for a period of one (1) year from the date of the original purchase  
at retail. We will repair or replace, at our option, any defective part without charge for the part. Parts used for replace-  
ment may be replaced with those of like kind and quality and may be new or remanufactured. Parts used for replace-  
ment are warranted for the remainder of the original warranty period.  
b. Embedded Software. MDEA warrants that all software incorporated into this television set (the “Embedded  
Software”) will perform in accordance with the functional description of Embedded Software in all material respects,  
but MDEA does not warrant that the Embedded Software is error-free. The limited warranty contained in this section  
shall continue for a period of one (1) year from the date of the original purchase at retail. If, after prompt notice within  
the warranty period, MDEA determines that the Embedded Software has failed to perform in accordance with such  
functional description in all material respects and if such failure is not due to accident, misuse, modification or misap-  
plication of the Embedded Software, then MDEA shall modify or replace the nonconforming Embedded Software at  
no charge to you, which at MDEA’s sole discretion may be fulfilled by means of modification or replacement software  
contained on a replacement memory card for Customer installation. The foregoing shall be MDEA’s sole obligation  
to you under this limited warranty. All rights under this limited warranty on the Embedded Software also subject to  
your acceptance of and compliance with the terms of the Software License Agreement applicable to this television,  
and this limited warranty on the Embedded Software shall be null and void if the Embedded Software is modified or  
changed in any manner except as specifically authorized by MDEA.  
c. Labor. For thirty (30) days after the original purchase at retail, we will repair or replace, at our option, the lenticu-  
lar screen if it proves defective. For certain items that are designed to be replaced by the consumer, including (but  
not limited to) some Embedded Software, the consumer is solely responsible for any replacement labor. For all other  
parts, we will provide the labor for a warranty repair by an authorized MITSUBISHI service center without charge for  
one (1) year from the original date of purchase at retail.  
d. Notice. To obtain warranty service, you must notify an authorized MITSUBISHI service center of any defect within  
the applicable warranty time period.  
e. This DLP Projection Television uses a single DLP chip to create the screen image. This technology creates the  
image using small dots, or picture elements (pixels). Your DLP Projection TV is manufactured to a high level of perfor-  
mance and quality, in fact, 99.99% perfect in the number of properly functioning pixels. As in other display technol-  
ogy, sometimes a pixel is continuously active, inactive or the incorrect color. Our standard is clear; MDEA warrants  
only that the percentage of properly functioning pixels will be not less than 99.99% of all pixels.  
BEFORE REQUESTING SERVICE, please review the instruction booklet to insure proper installation and  
correct customer control adjustment. If the problem persists please arrange for warranty service.  
1. TO OBTAIN WARRANTY SERVICE:  
a. Contact your nearest authorized MITSUBISHI service center, whose name and address can be obtained from your  
MITSUBISHI dealer, by writing at the address provided below, calling MDEA at the 800-332-2119, or by using the  
b. Warranty service will be provided in your home or, if required, at an authorized service shop, provided that your  
television is located within the geographic territory customarily covered by an authorized MITSUBISHI service center.  
If not, you must either deliver your television to an authorized service location at your own expense, or pay for any  
travel and/or transportation costs the service center may charge to and from your home. Actual service labor will be  
provided without charge.  
c. Proof of purchase date from an authorized MITSUBISHI dealer is required when requesting warranty service.  
Present your sales receipt or other document which establishes proof and date of purchase. THE RETURN OF THE  
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82  
Warranty  
OWNER REGISTRATION CARD IS NOT A CONDITION OF COVERAGE UNDER THIS LIMITED WARRANTY. However,  
please return the Owner Registration Card so that we can contact you should a question of safety arise which could  
affect you.  
d. To obtain a replacement lamp, order the lamp directly from the MDEA Parts Department at (800) 553-7278.  
2. THIS LIMITED WARRANTY DOES NOT COVER:  
a. Up to .01% pixel outages (small dot picture elements that are dark or incorrectly illuminated).  
b. Damage to the lenticular screen or Fresnel lens, screen frame, cosmetic damage or to any other damage where  
such damage is caused by unauthorized modification, alteration, repairs to or service of the product by anyone other  
than an authorized MITSUBISHI service center; physical abuse to or misuse of the product (including any failure to  
carry out any maintenance as described in the Owner’s Guide including air vent cleaning or any product damaged  
by excessive physical or electrical stress); any products that have had a serial number or any part thereof altered,  
defaced or removed; product use in any manner contrary to the Owner’s Guide; freight damage; or any damage  
caused by acts of God or other factors beyond the reasonable control of MDEA, such as power surge damage  
caused by electrical system or lightning. This limited warranty also excludes service calls where no defect in the  
product covered under this warranty is found, service calls related to unsatisfactory audio or visual reception or signal  
unless caused by a defect in the product that is covered under this limited warranty, all costs, expenses or any other  
damages arising from product installation, or set-ups, any adjustments of user controls (including contrast, bright-  
ness, color, tint, fine tuning, sharpness), other adjustment necessary to prepare the unit for display or use, connection  
with any external audio receiver, antenna, cable or satellite systems, or service of products purchased or serviced  
outside the U.S.A. Please consult the operating instructions contained in the Owner’s Guide furnished with the  
product for information regarding user controls.  
3. ANY EXPRESS WARRANTY NOT PROVIDED HEREIN, AND ANY REMEDY WHICH, BUT FOR THIS PROVISION,  
MIGHT ARISE BY IMPLICATION OR OPERATION OF LAW, IS HEREBY EXCLUDED AND DISCLAIMED. THE IMPLIED  
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE EXPRESSLY  
LIMITED TO A TERM OF ONE YEAR.  
4. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHALL MDEA BE LIABLE TO PURCHASER OR ANY OTHER PERSON FOR ANY  
INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, WHETHER ARISING OUT OF BREACH OF WARRANTY,  
BREACH OF CONTRACT, OR OTHERWISE.  
5. Some states do not allow limitations on how long an implied warranty lasts, or the exclusion or limitation of inciden-  
tal, special, or consequential damages, so the above limitations or exclusions may not apply to you.  
6. This limited warranty gives you specific legal rights, and you may also have other rights which vary from state to  
state.  
7. In the event of any dispute under this limited warranty, jurisdiction and venue for resolving that dispute will be in the  
state where the television was purchased and the laws of such state will govern.  
MITSUBISHI DIGITAL ELECTRONICS AMERICA, INC.  
9351 Jeronimo Road  
Irvine, CA 92618-1904  
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Index  
83  
Closed Captions 37  
Color Adjustments 34  
Reset Color 34, 72  
Computer  
and Display Formats 27  
Connecting 26  
Contrast 35  
I
Index  
INFO Key  
ChannelView 22  
A
USB Menu 28  
Accent Lighting 33  
IR Emitter Placement 46  
IR NetCommand Output (jack) 16  
Activity Menu 21  
Automatic Generation 41  
Change Input Name 40  
Customizing 40  
NetCommand-Controlled Switch-  
ing of A/V Receiver Inputs 48  
Removing a Disconnected HDMI  
Device 40  
L
Control Panel 9  
Control Panel Lock 9, 44  
Lamp Cartridge Replacement 69  
Lamp Mode 39  
D
Language  
Date. See Clock  
Changing the Menu Language  
38  
in Digital Programs 36  
Default Settings, Returning to 72  
DIGITAL AUDIO OUT 16  
Dolby Digital 16, 54  
DVD Player  
and TV’s Remote Control 59  
Connecting 17, 18  
DVI Device, Connecting 18  
Anamorphic Picture Format 24  
Antenna Input (ANT) 15, 16  
Signal Strength for Digital Chan-  
nels 23  
Audio Lock (A/V receiver control) 60  
Audio Output Jacks 15, 16  
Auto Input Sensing 11  
Auto-Off (Sleep Timer) 21  
Auto-On (Timer) 38  
SAP (Second Audio Program) 36  
Learn 40. See also NetCommand IR  
Control  
Letter Box Image Display 24  
Level Sound 36  
Listen To 36  
Listings 22  
Lock TV  
F
Fan Noise 4  
Film Mode 33  
A/V Receiver  
Bypassing the Lock 57  
Lock by Ratings 43  
Lock by Time 44  
Lock Control Panel 44  
Preset V-Chip Blocking 42  
Filter, Air (on lamp cartridge) 70  
Font (digital closed captions) 37  
FORMAT (aspect ratio, MORE menu)  
24  
Freeze Picture (PAUSE key) 8  
Front Panel  
and Speakers Option 36  
and TV’s Remote Control 59  
Audio Lock 60  
Connecting 16, 20  
Controlling Sound Volume 22  
Disconnecting Analog 22  
NetCommand IR Control 51, 52  
Controlling a Device Connected  
to the A/V Receiver 31, 55  
Video and Audio Switching via  
HDMI 55  
M
Blue Glow Accent Lighting 33  
Controls 9  
Memorizing Channels 10, 39  
Add Single Channel to Memory  
39  
G
Game  
MP3 Player (audio-only connection)  
15  
3D Video 25  
Mute  
B
Game Picture Mode 35  
HDMI Cables for Games 16  
GUIDE Key  
Closed Captions 37  
MUTE Key 8  
Video Mute 33  
Batteries 7  
Blue Glow 33  
Bright (Lamp Mode) 39  
Brightness (picture adjustment) 35  
ChannelView 22  
HDMI Control 68  
NetCommand Control 48, 50  
N
Name (Inputs > Name menu) 40  
NetCommand IR Control  
About 45  
C
Cable Box  
H
and TV’s Remote Control 59  
Connecting 17, 18, 19  
Captions Menu 37  
CEC (Consumer Electronics Control)  
31, 66  
A/V Receiver 22, 67, 77  
Troubleshooting 74  
Channels  
HD (High-Definition) Signal) 24  
HDMI  
A/V Receiver Control 52  
Initial Setup for Most Devices 47  
Operating 48  
Changing Out an HDMI Device  
and Auto Input Sensing 11  
Connecting an HDMI Device 17  
A/V Receiver with HDMI 20  
HDMI Cable Categories 16  
HDMI Control of CEC Devices 66  
HDMI Jack 16  
Troubleshooting 77  
P
Parental Menu 43  
Pass Code  
antennaweb.org 39  
Physical/Virtual Channel Num-  
bers 39  
Resetting 57  
Setting 42  
Removing an HDMI Device from  
the Activity Menu 40  
Headphones  
PAUSE Key 8  
PerfectColor 34  
PerfectTint 34  
Photo Viewing 29  
Scan (memorize) 10, 39  
Troubleshooting 75  
ChannelView™ Channel Listings 22  
Cleaning 71  
Jack 16  
Speakers Option 36  
Clock, Set Date and Time 38  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
84  
Index  
Picture  
System Reset 9, 73  
Picture+ Adjustments 34  
Picture Menu Adjustments 35  
Picture Quality and Film Mode  
33  
T
Test Picture 33  
3D GLASSES EMITTER Jack 16  
3D Video 25, 34  
Time. See Clock  
Timer (auto-on) 38  
Time Zone. See Clock  
Troubleshooting 72  
Troubleshooting 76  
Power On/Off 9, 12  
Troubleshooting 75  
R
Ratings (TV and Movie) 43  
Remote Control  
U
USB Menu 29  
Batteries 7  
Keys and Functions 8  
Programming Codes (reference  
chart) 61  
Programming Instructions 60  
Reset 71  
V
V-Chip Ratings  
Definitions 43  
In Status Display 23  
VCR  
Reset  
Connecting 19  
A/V Memory Reset (for the cur-  
rent input) 72  
A/V Reset (for all inputs) 73  
HDMI Auto Input Sensing 11  
Pass Code 57  
PerfectColor/PerfecTint 72  
Remote Control 71  
Remote Control Audio Lock 60  
System Reset 9  
Troubleshooting 76  
Video from a Digital Camera 30  
Video Game. See Game  
Video Mute 33  
Viewing Device. See Activity Menu  
X
x.v.Color 16, 17, 35  
TV Reset Comparison Guide 72  
RS-232C 16  
S
Safety Instructions 5  
SAP (second audio program) 36  
Satellite Receiver  
and the Remote Control 59  
Connecting 17, 18  
Scan (memorize channels) 39  
ScreenSaver 33  
SD (Standard-Definition Signal) 24  
Service and Support 72  
Signal Definitions 24  
Signal Strength Indicator 23  
Sleep Timer 21  
Sound  
Controlling A/V Receiver Volume  
(NetCommand) 52  
Audio Lock 60  
Level Sound 36  
Sound Mode (audio effects) 36  
Speakers Option 36  
Standard-Definition Signal 24  
Standard Lamp Mode 39  
Stand Part Number 4  
Status Display 23  
Stereo System. See A/V Receiver  
Surround Sound 53, 54  
Simulated Surround Sound 36  
TV Audio Outputs 16  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  
Website:  
E-mail:  
For questions, call Consumer Relations at  
800-332-2119  
To order replacement or additional  
remote controls or lamp cartridges,  
or call  
800-553-7278  
SYSTEM RESET  
If the TV does not respond to the remote control,  
control-panel buttons, or will not power on/off, press  
and hold the POWER button on the control panel for  
ten seconds.  
The green LED will flash quickly for about one  
minute. When the green LED stops flashing, you may  
turn on the TV. Settings changes you made most  
recently, before using SYSTEM RESET, may be lost.  
V41_V41+_V41C_IB_20090325  
© 2009 Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America, Inc.  
Download from Www.Somanuals.com. All Manuals Search And Download.  

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