Sony CD Player PDW 70MD User Manual

3-990-975-14 (1)  
Professional Disc  
Recorder  
Instructions for Use  
Before operating the unit, please read this manual  
thoroughly and retain it for future reference.  
PDW-70MD  
© 2006 Sony Corporation  
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manual, may cause harmful interference to radio  
communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential  
area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the  
user will be required to correct the interference at his own  
expense.  
accordance with the instruction manual, it may cause  
interference to other equipment. If this unit causes  
interference (which can be determined by unplugging  
the power cord from the unit), try these measures:  
Relocate the unit with respect to the susceptible  
equipment. Plug this unit and the susceptible  
equipment into different branch circuit.  
You are cautioned that any changes or modifications not  
expressly approved in this manual could void your authority to  
operate this equipment.  
Consult your dealer. (According to standard EN60601-1-2 and  
CISPR11, Class B, Group 1)  
All interface cables used to connect peripherals must be  
shielded in order to comply with the limits for a digital device  
pursuant to Subpart B of Part 15 of FCC Rules.  
WARNING on power connection  
Use a proper power cord for your local power supply.  
1. Use the approved Power Cord (3-core mains lead) /  
Appliance Connector / Plug with earthing-contacts that  
conforms to the safety regulations of each country if  
applicable.  
2. Use the Power Cord (3-core mains lead) / Appliance  
Connector / Plug conforming to the proper ratings (Voltage,  
Ampere). If you have questions on the use of the above  
Power Cord / Appliance Connector / Plug, please consult a  
qualified service personnel.  
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules.  
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this  
device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device  
must accept any interference received, including interference  
that may cause undesired operation.  
For customers in Canada  
This Class A digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-  
003.  
Symbols on the products  
This symbol indicates the equipotential  
terminal which brings the various parts of a  
system to the same potential.  
WARNING on power connection for  
medical use  
Please use the following power supply cord.  
With connectors (plug or female) and cord types other than  
those indicated in this table, use the power supply cord that  
is approved for use in your area.  
This symbol is intended to alert the user to  
the presence of important operating and  
maintenance (servicing) instructions in the  
literature accompanying the appliance.  
United States and Canada  
Plug Type  
Cord type  
HOSPITAL GRADE*  
Min.Type SJT  
Min.18 AWG  
Maximum Rating for Plug  
and Appliance Couplers  
10A/125V  
Important safeguards/notices for use in the  
medical environments  
Safety approval  
UL Listed and CSA  
*Note: Grounding reliability can only be achieved when the equipment is  
connected to an equivalent receptacle marked ‘Hospital Only’ or ‘Hospi-  
tal Grade’.  
1. All the equipments connected to this unit shall be  
certified according to Standard IEC60601-1,  
IEC60950-1, IEC60065 or other IEC/ISO Standards  
applicable to the equipments.  
2. Furthermore all configurations shall comply with the  
system standard IEC60601-1-1.  
Caution  
When you dispose of the unit or accessories, you must  
obey the law in the relative area or country and the  
regulation in the relative hospital.  
Everybody who connects additional equipment to the  
signal input part or signal output part configures a  
medical system, and is therefore, responsible that the  
system complies with the requirements of the system  
standard IEC60601-1-1.  
For the customers in Canada  
This unit has been certified according to Standard CSA  
C22.2 NO.601.1.  
If in doubt, consult the qualified service personnel.  
3. The leakage current could increase when connected to  
other equipment.  
WARNING  
4. For this particular equipment, all accessory equipment  
connected as noted above, must be connected to mains  
via an additional isolation transformer conforming with  
the construction requirements of IEC60601-1 and  
providing at least Basic Insulation.  
Excessive sound pressure from earphones and headphones  
can cause hearing loss.  
In order to use this product safely, avoid prolonged  
listening at excessive sound pressure levels.  
5. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio  
frequency energy. If it is not installed and used in  
3
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For the State of California, USA only  
Perchlorate Material - special handling may apply, See  
Perchlorate Material : Lithium battery contains perchlorate.  
For the customers in Taiwan only  
Voor de Klanten in Nederland  
• Gooi de batterij niet weg maar lever deze in als  
klein chemisch afval (KCA).  
• Dit apparaat bevat een vast ingebouwde  
batterij die niet vervangen hoeft te worden  
tijdens de levensduur van het apparaat.  
• Raadpleeg uw leverancier indien de batterij  
toch vervangen moet worden.De batterij mag  
alleen vervangen worden door vakbekwaam  
servicepersoneel.  
• Lever het apparaat aan het einde van de  
levensduur in voor recycling, de batterij zal dan  
op correcte wijze verwerkt worden.  
4
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Table of Contents  
Handling of Discs When Recording Does Not End Normally (Salvage  
5
Table of Contents  
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Quick Scene Selection (Adding Sub Clips During Recording, Playback,  
or Search)................................................................................... 52  
6
Table of Contents  
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Table of Contents  
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Overview  
1
Chapter  
Video bitrates and audio channels selectable  
according to application  
Features  
You can select the appropriate video bitrate for your  
application from three video bitrate modes: 35 Mbps (HQ:  
high quality mode), 25 Mbps (SP: standard mode), and 18  
Mbps (LP: long-play mode). You can select 2-channel or  
4-channel audio. If the audio channel modes are the same,  
different video bitrates can be mixed on the same disc.  
The PDW-70MD is a professional disc recorder  
supporting HD playback and recording with Professional  
1)  
Disc media.  
When you use this unit in combination with a nonlinear  
2)  
editing system, the FAM function enables data file  
transfers between the unit and computers over the i.LINK  
interface, allowing the unit to be used like an external hard  
drive. The unit can be connected to Sony nonlinear editors,  
monitors, and video equipment with HDSDI interfaces via  
its standard HDSDI I/O connectors. It incorporates a color  
LCD display, allowing you to check video and use the  
menu system without connecting an external monitor.  
Rich selection of recording and playback  
functions  
Support for multiple frame frequencies  
The unit can record and play back four different frame  
frequencies: 1080/59.94i (displayed as 60I), 50i (displayed  
as 50I), 29.97PsF (displayed as 30P), and 25PsF.  
HD downconvert function  
1) Professional Disc is a trademark of Sony Corporation.  
2) FAM: File access mode  
The unit is provided with a downconvert function. HD disc  
playback signals can be downconverted to SD signals and  
then output as SDSDI or composite signals, or output via  
the i.LINK (DV) interface. This allows you to shoot and  
record masters in an HD environment, and to use SD  
nonlinear editors and monitors for editing and program  
output.  
Features of This Unit  
The principal features of this unit are as follows.  
1)  
DVCAM upconvert function  
MPEG HD codec  
The unit features an upconvert function, with the ability to  
upconvert to HD and output HDSDI signals when playing  
back DVCAM discs.  
High-quality video and audio recording and  
playback  
The MPEG HD codec provides video compression  
compliant with the MPEG-2 MP@HL standard. It enables  
HD 4:2:0 digital component file recording in the 1080i  
(1,080 effective scanning lines, interlaced) format  
currently in use by many broadcast facilities.  
Uncompressed PCM recording of 16-bit 48 kHz audio  
delivers a wide dynamic range with a high signal-to-noise  
ratio.  
Recording of proxy AV data  
Proxy AV data is a low-resolution (1.5 Mbps video, 64  
kbps per audio channel), MPEG-4 based version of a full-  
resolution data stream. Whenever this unit records full-  
resolution MPEG HD data, it simultaneously generates  
and records low-resolution proxy AV data. Because of its  
small size, proxy AV data can be transferred quickly over  
computer networks, easily edited in the field with laptop  
1)  
computers, and readily used in a wide variety of  
1) MPEG HD is a trademark of Sony Corporation.  
applications, such as content management on small-scale  
servers.  
8
Features  
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1) The supplied PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software can be used to create  
simple EDLs (Edit Decision Lists).  
1) XDCAM allows you to record various kinds of information about the  
video and audio data, such as the date of shooting, the editor, the recording  
format, and comments. This data can be used in the following ways.  
The supplied PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software can add titles,  
comments, and other text data to discs and clips.  
The ability to search metadata for the required audio and video scenes  
brings greater efficiency to various stages of the video production  
process (editing, archiving).  
Supports a variety of interfaces  
This unit supports the following interfaces.  
HDSDI: This enables input and output of HD digital video  
and embedded audio signals (4 channels).  
SDSDI: This enables output of SD component digital  
video and embedded audio signals (4 channels).  
AES/EBU: This enables input and output of AES/EBU  
serial digital audio signals (4 channels).  
i.LINK(AV/C): This enables output of DV-format digital  
video and audio signals (4 channels).  
Analog video: This enables output of HD analog  
component (RGB or YPbPr) and SD composite  
signals.  
Other features  
High-speed searches by the jog and shuttle dials  
Like conventional VTRs, this unit features jog and shuttle  
dials for searching for specific scenes within clips. The  
jog/variable mode supports –1 to +2 times normal speed  
searching in field units. The shuttle mode enables high-  
speed searching at up to 20 times normal speed.  
Analog audio: This enables input of 2 channels and output  
of 2 channels (1/2 or 3/4) of analog audio.  
Variety of remote control units  
• Infrared remote commander (supplied)  
• RS-232C 9-pin remote control  
• RS-422A 9-pin remote control  
• Mini-jack 4-pin remote control  
Convenient disc-based playback and  
search functions  
Thumbnail searches  
Color LCD display  
An independent clip file is generated whenever recording  
starts and stops. The first frame of each clip is used as the  
thumbnail for that clip.  
The unit is equipped with a 16:9, 3.5-inch color LCD  
which allows you to check the contents of the disc and use  
the menu system without connecting an external monitor.  
You can display a list of thumbnails on the color LCD or  
an external monitor, and cue up a desired scene by  
selecting the corresponding thumbnail.  
Features of the PDBK-101/102/103/  
104 Option Boards  
Essence mark searches  
You can record essence marks at any scene during video  
recording, or at the recording stop position. You can  
display a list of essence mark scenes on the color LCD or  
an external monitor. Essence marks can also be added after  
recording with the supplied PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing  
Software.  
The following option boards provide expanded functions  
and interfaces for the unit.  
Notes  
• Contact your Sony service representative for more  
information about purchasing and installing option  
boards.  
• Up to two option boards may be installed. Some  
combinations are not supported.  
• Option slot 1: PDBK-101  
• Option slot 2: One of the PDBK-102, PDBK-103, and  
PDBK-104 boards  
Thumbnail expansion  
After selecting a clip in the thumbnail list, you can divide  
the clip into 12 parts and show a list of thumbnails for the  
first frame in each part. This makes it easy to find the scene  
you want within the clip. This expansion can be repeated  
up to 3 times (1,728 divisions).  
Scene selection  
You can create and play back clip lists of selected clips  
from the disc, arranged in any order. One disc can store up  
to 99 clip lists.  
PDBK-101 Network Board (Gigabit  
Ethernet)  
Installation of this board provides a gigabit Ethernet  
connector, which can be used to transfer disc files over  
LAN networks and to record MXF (Material eXchange  
Format) files from external devices to discs.  
It also allows this unit to be controlled remotely by FTP  
commands.  
IT friendly  
Computer access to files (file access mode)  
Video and audio clip data are recorded as files. The FAM  
function enables quick random access by computers to the  
1)  
video, audio, and metadata files stored on Professional  
Discs, with the ability to display thumbnail lists on the  
computer screen and perform file-based reads and writes.  
9
Features  
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PDBK-102 MPEG-TS (Transport Stream)  
Input/Output Board  
Installation of this board enhances the functionality of the  
standard i.LINK connector, allowing it to be used as an  
1)  
2)  
3)  
I/O interface for HDV 1080i format compatible TS  
signals.  
HD files recorded on the disc can be converted to TS  
signals compatible with the HDV1080i format for transfer  
to HDV devices and HDV editors, and TS signals from  
HDV devices and HDV editors can be converted to MPEG  
HD compatible files for recording by this unit.  
1) HDV and  
are trademarks of Sony Corporation and Victor  
Company of Japan, Limited.  
2) HDV1080i: Refers to devices compliant with the “HDV1080i Standard”  
for recording HD signals on DV tape. There are 1080 effective lines.  
3) TS: MPEG-2 transport streams containing MPEG video, MPEG audio,  
and control information. This is the standard interface for HDV  
equipment.  
PDBK-103 Analog HD Input Board  
Installation of this board provides analog HD component  
input connectors, to enable recoding of analog HD  
component input signals (RGB and YPbPr, Sync) to discs.  
PDBK-104 SD Input Upconverter Board  
Installation of this board provides SD input connectors , to  
allow SD input signals (SDSDI and composite) to be  
upconverted to HD signals for recording on discs.  
Note  
This unit cannot record non-standard composite signals,  
for example the output of VTRs that are not equipped with  
time base correctors.  
10  
Features  
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Names and Functions of Parts  
Front Panel  
q; Disc slot and EJECT button  
1 On/standby 1  
EJECT  
F1  
switch and indicator  
F2  
ACCESS  
F3  
qa Infrared sensor  
2 ACCESS indicator  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
MENU  
F4  
F5  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
LOCAL  
REMOTE  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
LEVEL  
PAGE DISPLAY  
3 Remote control switch  
4 LEVEL knob  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH 1  
CH 2  
CH 3  
CH 4  
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
5 PHONES jack  
6 SHIFT button  
7 MENU button  
qs RESET button  
8 SUB CLIP/CLIP MENU button  
qd SET button  
9 THUMBNAIL/ESSENCE MARK button  
1 Display and function menu section  
3 Arrow buttons  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
ACCESS  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
LOCAL  
MENU  
Handle  
CHAPTER  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
EXPAND  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
4 Shuttle/jog/  
variable-speed  
playback control  
block  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH 1  
CH 2  
CH 3  
CH 4  
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
2 Audio level adjustment section  
5 Recording/playback control block  
a On/standby 1 switch and indicator  
When using the unit, normally leave the rear panel  
POWER switch in the * (on) position, and use this switch  
to switch the unit between the operating and standby states.  
When the POWER switch (see page 19) on the rear panel  
is in the * (on) position, this switches the unit between the  
operating state (the indicator is lit green) and the standby  
state (the indicator is lit orange).  
b ACCESS indicator  
When the indicator is lit orange, pressing this switch puts  
the unit into the operating state. The indicator initially  
flashes green and then lights green when the unit enters the  
operating state.  
When the indicator is lit green, pressing this switch puts  
the unit into the standby state. The indicator initially  
flashes green, and then lights orange when the unit enters  
the standby state.  
This lights blue while a disc is being accessed and while a  
file is open by a FAM or FTP connection. If the on/standby  
switch is pressed while this indicator is lit, the unit waits  
until access to the disc is completed before switching to the  
standby state.  
11  
Names and Functions of Parts  
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screen appears. To play back the clips in the order  
they were recorded, press this button again, turning it  
off. The clip list selection screen disappears.  
Note  
Do not turn off the POWER switch on the rear panel or  
disconnect the power cord while the ACCESS indicator is  
lit. Doing so can result in a loss of data on the disc.  
Note  
This button does not light, and pressing it has no  
effect, when no clip lists are registered.  
c Remote control switch  
Different positions of the switch allow different  
operations, as follows.  
CLIP MENU button: Press this button, turning it on, to  
load, save, or delete a clip list. A clip list menu  
appears. To erase the clip list screen from the display,  
press the button again, turning it off.  
NETWORK: Enables access to the network. Operation  
from the front panel of the unit is disabled during  
access to a network device.  
LOCAL: Enables operation from the front panel of the  
unit.  
REMOTE: Enables remote control of this unit from a  
device connected to an external device connector on  
the rear of the unit or from a remote control panel (not  
supplied) connected to the unit.  
For details about clip lists, see Chapter 4 “Scene  
i THUMBNAIL/ESSENCE MARK button  
This functions as a THUMBNAIL button when pressed  
alone, and as an ESSENCE MARK button when pressed  
together with the SHIFT button.  
Use the setup menu item INTERFACE SELECT  
>REMOTE I/F to select which of the connectors is  
used for remote control (see page 71).  
THUMBNAIL button: Press this button, turning it on, to  
search for a frame by specifying a thumbnail (see  
page 36), and to create a clip list. A thumbnail  
selection screen appears on the display. To erase the  
selection screen from the display, press the button  
again, turning it off.  
d LEVEL (audio level adjustment) knob  
This adjusts the volume of the audio output from the  
PHONES jack. At the same time, it also adjusts the volume  
of the output from the AUDIO MONITOR connector on  
the rear panel.  
ESSENCE MARK button: Press this button, turning it  
on, to search for a frame by specifying an essence  
mark (see page 39), and to record an essence mark.  
An essence mark selection list appears. To erase the  
selection list from the display, press the button again,  
turning it off.  
e PHONES jack (stereo phone jack)  
Connect stereo headphones with an impedance of 8 ohms  
to monitor audio during recording, playback, and editing.  
The monitored channel is selected by the MONI CH and  
MONI SEL items on page P1 of the function menu (see  
j Disc slot and EJECT button  
Insert discs into the disc slot. The indicator flashes in  
orange, and lights in blue when the disc is completely  
loaded.  
Press the EJECT button to eject a disc. The indicator  
flashes in blue, and goes off when the disc is completely  
ejected.  
f SHIFT button  
When pressed together with a button having two functions,  
switches between the functions of the button.  
Function button names are displayed in white when the  
buttons are pressed alone, and in yellow when they are  
pressed together with the SHIFT button.  
k Infrared sensor  
This receives signals from the supplied remote  
commander.  
g MENU button  
Use this for system menu operations. The system menu  
appears in the display when this button is pressed. The  
same information is also superimposed on the display of a  
monitor connected to the unit.  
l RESET button  
Press this button to reset counters. This button is also used  
to cancel setup menu settings and abandon scene selections  
(thumbnail search), and to cancel other operations.  
Press once more to exit the menu.  
For more information about the system menu, see Chapter  
m SET button  
Press this button to confirm menu and scene selection  
(thumbnail search) settings, and to execute operations.  
h SUB CLIP/CLIP MENU button  
This functions as a SUB CLIP button when pressed alone,  
and as a CLIP MENU button when pressed together with  
the SHIFT button.  
SUB CLIP button: Press this button, turning it on, to  
perform playback of a clip list. A clip list selection  
For details about scene selection, see Chapter 4 “Scene  
12  
Names and Functions of Parts  
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1 Display and function menu section  
1 Display  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
2 F1 to F5 buttons  
F5  
PAGE DISPLAY  
3 DISPLAY/KEY INH button  
4 PAGE button  
q; Audio level meters  
5 Monitor video display section  
qa Audio format  
0
0
TCG  
6 Function  
menu  
EXT  
-12  
-12  
-20  
-20  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
qs Recording/playback format  
-30  
-40  
-30  
-40  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
-60  
-60  
1
2
3
4
qd Time data type  
+
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
KEY INH  
REC INH  
REMOTE  
RS422A  
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
MPEG HD  
SP  
1080  
COOO1  
60I  
INPUT  
VITC  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
qf Time data display section  
00:00.00:00  
P2  
qg System line number  
qh Clip number  
7 Operation modes  
8 Remaining disc capacity  
9 Reference signal  
qj System frequency  
qk Audio monitor channels  
a Display  
DISPLAY button: Each press of this button switches the  
monitor video display section between its three  
display sizes.  
KEY INH button: Each press of this button turns key  
operation inhibit mode on or off.  
Normally this displays the audio level meters, timecode,  
monitor pictures, and current settings. It also displays  
menus and scene selection (thumbnail search) setting  
screens.  
b F1 to F5 (Function 1 to Function 5) buttons  
These buttons are enabled when the function menu (see  
page 65) is visible. Each press of a button changes the  
setting of the corresponding item in the menu.  
When the SUB CLIP and THUMBNAIL buttons are lit,  
the F4 button functions as a CHAPTER button, and the F5  
button functions as an EXPAND button.  
d PAGE button  
This displays the function menu, if it is not already visible.  
(The most recently accessed page appears.) If the function  
menu is visible, this button switches between the function  
menu pages (HOME, P1, P2).  
e Monitor video display section  
This displays monitor video and the system menu.  
You can press the DISPLAY button to switch the display  
of monitor video between three sizes. The largest size  
occupies the full display screen.  
c DISPLAY/KEY INH (key operation inhibit mode)  
button  
This functions as a DISPLAY button when pressed alone,  
and as a KEY INH button when pressed together with the  
SHIFT button.  
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Names and Functions of Parts  
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k Audio format  
Note  
During playback, this displays the number of recording  
audio channels on the disc and the number of quantization  
bits. During recording, this displays the input signal format  
selected with A1 INPUT to A4 INPUT on the HOME page  
of the function menu (see page 65). During display of E-  
Use the largest size to display the system menu and view  
superimposed information.  
f Function menu  
1)  
Use the PAGE button to display this menu, and to switch  
between the pages (HOME, P1, P2) of the menu. Each  
page has five setting items, which correspond to the F1 to  
F5 buttons. Press the corresponding button to change a  
setting.  
E video, this displays 2CH/16BIT (two channels, 16 bits)  
or 4CH/16BIT (four channels, 16 bits), according to the  
setting of AUDIO CONTROL >REC MODE in the setup  
menu (see page 70). Always displays 4CH/16BIT when  
the DVCAM format is being used.  
1) E-E: Abbreviation of Electric to Electric. A mode in which input video and  
audio signals are output after passing through electric circuits only.  
For details, see page 65 “Function Menu” in Chapter 6.  
g Operation modes  
l Recording/playback format  
This displays the following.  
During playback: Recording format of the loaded disc  
During recording/E-E screen display/FAM connection:  
This displays the current operation modes.  
KEY INH (key operation inhibit mode): Key operation  
inhibit mode has been turned on with the KEY INH  
button.  
REC INH (recording inhibit mode): Recording inhibit  
mode has been turned on by setting REC INH on page  
P1 of the function menu to “ON” (see page 66), or the  
currently loaded disc is write protected.  
Signal format  
Compression method (video  
bit rate)  
a)  
MPEG HD  
HQ  
SP  
LP  
Note  
DVCAM  
Recording inhibit mode is also turned on when the  
settings of the recorded part of the currently loaded  
disc do not match the current settings (number of  
recording audio channels, system frequency) of the  
unit.  
a) Selected with OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >REC FORMAT in the  
setup menu (see page 68).  
m Time data type  
This displays the type of the time data that appears in the  
time data display section. The time data type is set with  
CNTR SEL on page P1 of the function menu (see page 66).  
COUNTER: Elapsed recording/playback time  
TC/VITC: Timecode  
REMOTE/interface name (remote mode): The remote  
control switch is set to “REMOTE”. (The interface  
name corresponds to the setting of INTERFACE  
SELECT >REMOTE I/F in the setup menu (see page  
71).)  
UB/VIUB: User bits  
When TC or UB is selected, and VITC is selected under  
TC/VITC on page P2 of the function menu (see page 67),  
a VITC indicator appears, TC changes to VITC, and UB  
changes to VIUB.  
h Remaining disc capacity  
This displays the remaining capacity on the currently  
loaded disc.  
i Reference signal  
This displays the type of reference signal to which this unit  
n Time data display section  
Normally this displays the time data selected with CNTR  
SEL on page P1 of the function menu (see page 66).  
Messages appear here when an error occurs and when the  
unit enters a different mode.  
is synchronizing.  
When there is no display, the unit is synchronizing to the  
internal reference signal.  
INPUT: Input video  
HD REF: HD-format reference signal  
SD REF: SD-format reference signal  
o System line number  
This displays 1080, 525, or 625 depending on the signal  
format during recording, playback, FAM connection.  
j Audio level meters  
These display the audio recording levels (during  
recording) or audio playback levels (during playback) of  
channels 1 to 4. If an audio level exceeds 0 dB, the red  
indicator bar at the top lights.  
p Clip number  
This displays the clip number of the clip being monitored.  
q System frequency  
This displays the system frequency being used by this unit  
(60I, 50I, 30P, or 25P) (see page 22).  
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r Audio monitor channels  
This displays the audio monitor channels, as set with  
MONI CH and MONI SEL on page P1 of the function  
menu (see page 66).  
1 </IN button and ,/OUT button  
MARK1  
IN  
OUT  
When you are monitoring channels 1 and 2 (MONI CH is  
set to “CH 1/2”), the display changes as follows,  
depending on the setting of MONI SEL.  
2 M/MARK1 button and m/MARK2 button  
3 IN indicator and OUT indicator  
MARK2  
MONI SEL setting  
MONO L (monaural L)  
MONO R (monaural R)  
STEREO  
Display  
a </IN button and ,/OUT button  
1
2
1
2
When the setup or disc menu is visible, use these buttons  
to change menu settings. When the THUMBNAIL button  
is lit, you can use these for thumbnail selection.  
1 / 2  
1 + 2  
MIX  
An In or Out point is set when you press the SET button  
with the </IN or ,/OUT button held down. The In or  
Out point setting is deleted when you press the RESET  
button with the </IN or ,/OUT button held down.  
2 Audio level adjustment section  
b M/MARK1 button and m/MARK2 button  
When the setup or disc menu is visible, use these buttons  
to change menu settings. When the THUMBNAIL button  
is lit, you can use these for thumbnail selection.  
During recording and playback, the M/MARK1 or m/  
MARK2 button can be pressed with the SET button held  
down to record a SHOT MARK1 or SHOT MARK2 as an  
essence mark.  
1 CH 1 to CH 4 knobs  
2 VARIABLE switch  
CH 1  
CH 2  
CH 3  
CH 4  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
To delete or change essence marks, use the supplied PDZ-  
1 Proxy Browsing Software.  
a CH 1 to CH 4 (audio level) knobs  
Depending on the setting of the VARIABLE switch, these  
adjust the input audio or playback audio levels of CH 1 to  
CH 4.  
c IN indicator and OUT indicator  
IN indicator: This lights when an In point exists. It flashes  
if an attempt is made to set an In point after a recorded  
Out point.  
OUT indicator: This lights when an Out point exists. It  
flashes if an attempt is made to set an Out point before  
a recorded In point.  
b VARIABLE (audio level adjustment selector)  
switch  
This selects whether the input audio or the playback audio  
has the levels adjusted by the CH 1 to CH 4 knobs.  
REC: Adjust the input audio levels. The playback audio  
levels are fixed at their preset values.  
PRESET: All of the audio levels are fixed at preset values.  
PB: Adjust the playback audio levels. The input audio  
levels are fixed at their preset values.  
4 Shuttle/jog/variable-speed playback  
control block  
4 Jog/shuttle transport indicators  
3 Arrow buttons  
The four arrow buttons are also used as the MARK1  
button, MARK2 button, IN button, and OUT button, as  
follows.  
VAR  
1 VAR button  
JOG  
2 JOG button  
M button: MARK1 button  
SHUTTLE  
m button: MARK2 button  
3 SHUTTLE  
button  
5 Jog dial  
< button: IN button  
, button: OUT button  
You can use these buttons for menu setting operations,  
thumbnail selection, setting or deleting In/Out points, and  
so on.  
6 Shuttle dial  
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a VAR (variable) button  
To play back in variable-speed mode using the shuttle dial,  
press this button, turning it on.  
a PREV (previous)/TOP button  
This functions as a PREV button when pressed alone, and  
as a TOP button when pressed together with the SHIFT  
button.  
b JOG button  
To play back in jog mode using the jog dial, press this  
button, turning it on.  
PREV button: Press this button, turning it on, to jump to  
the first frame of the current clip. When pressed at the  
first frame of the current clip, this button jumps to the  
first frame of the previous clip.  
c SHUTTLE button  
To play back in shuttle mode using the shuttle dial, press  
TOP button: Press this button to jump to the first frame of  
the first clip.  
this button, turning it on.  
You can perform a high-speed search in the reverse  
direction by pressing the PREV button together with the  
PLAY button.  
d Jog/shuttle transport indicators  
These show the playback direction in jog, shuttle, or  
variable-speed mode.  
b PLAY button  
b (green): Lights during playback in the reverse direction.  
B (green): Lights during playback in the forward  
direction.  
Press this button, turning it on, to start playback. Press the  
STOP button to stop playback.  
You can perform a high-speed search in the forward or  
reverse direction by pressing this button together with the  
NEXT button or PREV button.  
x (orange): Lights during still image display.  
e Jog dial  
Turn this for playback in jog mode. Turn clockwise for  
forward direction playback, and counterclockwise for  
reverse direction playback. In jog mode, the playback  
speed varies in the range 1 times normal speed, according  
to the rotation rate of the jog dial. The dial has no detents.  
c NEXT/END button  
This functions as a NEXT button when pressed alone, and  
as an END button when pressed together with the SHIFT  
button.  
NEXT button: Press this button, turning it on, to jump to  
the first frame of the next clip.  
f Shuttle dial  
END button: Press this button to jump to the last frame of  
the last clip.  
You can perform a high-speed search in the forward  
direction by pressing the NEXT button together with the  
PLAY button.  
Turn this for playback in shuttle mode or variable-speed  
mode. Turn clockwise for forward direction playback, and  
counterclockwise for reverse direction playback.  
• In shuttle mode, the playback speed varies in the range  
20 times normal speed according to the angular  
position of the shuttle dial.  
d STOP/STANDBY button  
• In variable-speed mode, you can finely adjust the  
playback speed from –1 to +2 times normal speed,  
according to the angular position of the shuttle dial.  
The shuttle dial has a detent at the center position, for still  
image playback.  
This functions as a STOP button when pressed alone, and  
as a STANDBY button when pressed together with the  
SHIFT button.  
STOP button: Press this button, turning it on, to stop  
recording or playback. The frame at the stop position  
is displayed.  
STANDBY button: Press this button to put the unit into  
standby-off mode (the STOP button lights, and the  
STANDBY indicator off). Press it again to return to  
the original state (the STOP button lights, and the  
STANDBY indicator lights).  
5 Recording/playback control block  
1 PREV/TOP button  
2 PLAY button  
This unit enters standby-off mode automatically after a  
certain length of time passes in disc stop mode.  
3 NEXT/END button  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
e REC (record) button  
Press this button together with the PLAY button to start  
recording. Recording starts on the unrecorded part of the  
disc.  
Press the STOP button to stop recording. A clip is created  
from the recorded section.  
TOP  
END  
F REV  
F FWD  
STANDBY  
4 STOP/STANDBY button  
5 REC button  
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Rear Panel  
panel. The explanations in this section assume that all  
covers have been removed.  
Note  
When the unit is shipped from the factory, connector  
covers are attached to some of the connectors on the rear  
23).  
4 Digital audio signal input/output  
section  
5 Timecode input/output section  
REF VIDEO INPUT  
COMPOSITE OUT  
AUDIO MONITOR  
TIME CODE  
-
AC IN  
R
L
IN  
OUT  
1 Analog video signal  
POWER  
input/output section  
AUDIO INPUT  
2/4  
AUDIO OUTPUT  
2/4  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
1/2  
1/2  
3/4  
3/4  
1/3  
1/3  
(AES/EBU)  
6 Power supply  
INPUT  
2 Analog audio signal  
section  
input/output section  
OUTPUT  
HDSDI INPUT  
HDSDI OUTPUT  
SDSDI OUTPUT  
1
2
MONITOR  
RS232C  
REMOTE(9P)  
S400  
3 Digital signal input/  
CONTROL  
output section  
7 External device connection  
section  
When CHAR SEL on page P1of the function menu is set  
to “ON” (see page 66), information such as timecode,  
menu settings, and error messages is superimposed on the  
output signals.  
1 Analog video signal input/output  
section  
1 REF VIDEO INPUT connectors  
c MONITOR connector (D-sub 15-pin)  
2 COMPOSITE OUT connectors  
This outputs HD analog video signals. The output signals  
can be switched with INTERFACE SELECT >D-SUB  
OUTPUT in the setup menu (see page 70).  
REF VIDEO INPUT  
COMPOSITE OUT  
2 Analog audio signal input/output  
3 MONITOR  
connector  
section  
MONITOR  
1 AUDIO INPUT 1/3 and 2/4 connectors  
2 AUDIO OUTPUT 1/3 and 2/4  
connectors  
3 AUDIO MONITOR  
connectors  
a REF VIDEO INPUT (reference video signal input)  
connectors (BNC type)  
AUDIO MONITOR  
R
L
The two connectors form a loop-through connection; when  
a reference video signal is input to the left connector, the  
AUDIO INPUT  
2/4  
AUDIO OUTPUT  
2/4  
1/3  
1/3  
same signal is output from the right connector (  
) to a  
connected device. When no connection is made to the right  
connector, the left connector is automatically terminated  
with an impedance of 75 ohms.  
b COMPOSITE OUT connectors (phono jack, BNC  
type)  
These output composite video signals.  
a AUDIO INPUT (analog audio signal input) 1/3 and  
2/4 connectors (XLR 3-pin, female)  
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These connectors input two channels of analog audio.  
You can use the A1 INPUT to A4 INPUT items on the  
HOME page of the function menu (see page 65) to assign  
the signals input to connectors 1/3 (ANALOG1) and  
connectors 2/4 (ANALOG2) to audio channels 1 to 4.  
You can set the reference input levels with the setup menu  
item AUDIO CONTROL >LEVEL SELECT (the factory  
default settings are INPUT: +4 dB, REF LEVEL: 20 dB).  
menu settings, and error messages is superimposed on the  
output signals.  
4 Digital audio signal input/output  
section  
1 DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/EBU) INPUT  
1/2 and 3/4 connectors  
b AUDIO OUTPUT(analog audio signal output) 1/3  
and 2/4 connectors (XLR 3-pin, male)  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
1/2  
1/2  
3/4  
(AES/EBU)  
These output two channels of analog audio.  
For 4-channel audio, you can use the INTERFACE  
SELECT >AUDIO OUTPUT item of the setup menu (see  
page 70) to select whether to output channels 1 and 2, or  
channels 3 and 4 (factory default setting: channels 1 and  
2).  
You can set the output level with the setup menu item  
AUDIO CONTROL >LEVEL SELECT (factory default  
setting: +4 dB) (see page 70).  
INPUT  
3/4  
OUTPUT  
2 DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/EBU) OUTPUT  
1/2 and 3/4 connectors  
a DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/EBU) INPUT 1/2 and 3/4  
connectors (BNC type)  
These input AES/EBU format digital audio signals. The  
1/2 connector corresponds to audio channels 1 and 2, and  
the 3/4 connector corresponds to audio channels 3 and 4.  
c AUDIO MONITOR connectors (phono jack)  
These output audio signals for monitoring.  
You can select the channels to monitor with MONI CH and  
MONI SEL on page P1 of the function menu (see page 66).  
3 Digital signal input/output section  
b DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/EBU) OUTPUT 1/2 and  
3/4 connectors (BNC type)  
These output AES/EBU format digital audio signals. The  
1/2 connector corresponds to audio channels 1 and 2, and  
the 3/4 connector corresponds to audio channels 3 and 4.  
1 HDSDI INPUT connector  
2 HDSDI OUTPUT connectors  
3 SDSDI OUTPUT  
connector  
5 Timecode input/output section  
HDSDI INPUT  
HDSDI OUTPUT  
SDSDI OUTPUT  
1
2
1 TIME CODE IN connector  
2 TIME CODE OUT connector  
TIME CODE  
IN  
OUT  
a HDSDI (HD serial digital interface) INPUT  
connector (BNC type)  
This inputs HD format video and audio signals.  
b HDSDI (HD serial digital interface) OUTPUT  
connectors (BNC type)  
These output HD format video and audio signals.  
When CHAR SEL on page P1 of the function menu is set  
to “ON” (see page 66), information such as timecode,  
menu settings, and error messages is superimposed on the  
output signals.  
a TIME CODE IN connector  
Inputs SMPTE timecode generated by an external device.  
b TIME CODE OUT connector  
Outputs the following timecode, depending on the  
operating state of the unit.  
During playback: Playback timecode  
During recording: The timecode from the internal  
timecode generator or the timecode input to the TIME  
CODE IN connector.  
c SDSDI OUTPUT connector (BNC type)  
This outputs SDSDI signals downconverted from HD  
video input signals, or the SDSDI signals being played  
back or being recorded.  
When CHAR SEL on page P1 of the function menu is set  
to “ON” (see page 66), information such as timecode,  
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b RS232C (serial interface) connector (D-sub 9-pin,  
male)  
6 Power supply section  
Connect a computer or other device with a serial interface  
to control this unit from that device.  
1 - AC IN connector  
When you use this connector, set the remote connector  
selector switch to the RS232C side, and set INTERFACE  
SELECT >REMOTE I/F in the setup menu to “9PIN/RS-  
232C” (see page 71).  
2 POWER switch  
-AC IN  
POWER  
c REMOTE(9P) (remote control 9-pin) connector  
(D-sub 9-pin, RS-422A compliant, female)  
3
terminal  
To control this unit from a controller or VTR supporting  
the RS-422A Sony 9-pin VTR protocol, connect the device  
to this connector. When you use this connector, set the  
remote connector selector switch to the REMOTE(9P)  
side, and set INTERFACE SELECT > REMOTE I/F in the  
setup menu to “9PIN/RS232C” (see page 71).  
a -AC IN (AC power input) connector  
Connect to an AC power supply with the power cord (not  
supplied).  
d Remote connector selector switch  
Push this switch to the side of the remote control connector  
you are using, either the RS232C connector or the  
REMOTE (9P) connector.  
b POWER (main power) switch  
Press the + side to power on the unit. Press the a side to  
power off.  
When using the unit, normally leave the POWER switch in  
the + (on) position, and use the on/standby switch on the  
front panel to switch the unit between the operating state  
and standby state.  
e
S400 connector (6-pin, IEEE1394 compliant)  
Connect a DV device or computer using an i.LINK cable.  
The following connection types are supported. They are  
selected by setting INTERFACE SELECT >i.LINK  
MODE in the setup menu (see page 71).  
Note  
AV/C (Audio/Video Control) connection: Output  
DVCAM format digital video and audio signals  
(i.LINK MODE set to “AV/C”).  
If you press the on/standby switch on the front panel while  
the unit is in the operating state, the unit saves its data and  
then enters the standby state (the on/standby indicator  
lights orange). Before turning the main power off, always  
check to be sure that the unit is in the standby state, and  
then push the main power switch to the a side.  
Audio output signals are 2ch or 4ch, as selected by  
AUDIO CONTROL >DV OUT MODE in the setup  
menu (see page 70).  
FAM (file access mode) connection: Input and output  
files between this unit and a computer (i.LINK  
MODE set to “FAM (PC REMOTE)”).  
c
(equipotential ground) terminal  
Use to make an equipotential ground connection.  
Notes  
7 External device connection section  
• If video or audio signals from an external device  
connected to the S400 connector fail to be output,  
disconnect the i.LINK cable and connect it again,  
pushing it straight in.  
1 CONTROL connector  
2 RS232C connector  
• Before connecting or disconnecting an i.LINK cable  
between this unit and a device with a 6-pin i.LINK  
connector, power off the device and disconnect its power  
cord from the electrical outlet. If the i.LINK cable is  
connected or disconnected with the device’s power plug  
still connected, high voltage (8 to 40 V) from the  
device’s i.LINK connector can flow into this unit,  
possibly damaging the unit.  
3 REMOTE(9P) connector  
RS232C  
REMOTE(9P)  
S400  
CONTROL  
4
5
Remote connector  
selector switch  
S400 connector  
• When connecting this unit to a device with a 6-pin  
i.LINK connector, connect to the 6-pin i.LINK  
connector of the other device first.  
6 U terminal  
• Except in playback modes (jog and shuttle modes, etc.),  
audio signals output from this connector and monitored  
a CONTROL connector (minijack 4-pole)  
Connect the optional RM-LG2 Remote Control Unit.  
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on another device may sound different from the audio  
signals played back on this unit.  
e Recording/playback control keys  
PREV (previous) key: Press this to jump to the first frame  
of the current clip. When pressed at the first frame of  
the current clip, this button jumps to the first frame of  
the previous clip.  
f U (signal ground) terminal  
Connect to the system ground.  
PLAY key: Press this to start playback. Press the STOP  
key to stop playback.  
NEXT key: Press this to jump to the first frame of the next  
clip.  
Infrared Remote Commander  
STOP key: Press this to stop recording or playback.  
The corresponding functions are executed when you point  
the remote commander at the infrared sensor of the main  
unit and press the keys and setting pad.  
f SEARCH keys  
Press m to perform –5 times normal speed shuttle  
playback in the reverse direction.  
Press M to perform +5 times normal speed shuttle  
playback in the forward direction.  
1 Setting pad  
PUSH SET  
2 THUMBNAIL key  
THUMBNAIL SUB CLIP  
3 CHARACTER key  
CHARACTER  
Using the infrared remote commander  
4 SUB CLIP key  
Before use  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
Pull out the insulation sheet.  
5 Recording/playback  
control keys  
SEARCH  
Insulation sheet  
6 SEARCH keys  
a Setting pad  
Positions on the pad correspond to functions of the main  
unit, as follows.  
To replace the lithium battery in the remote  
commander  
The remote commander uses a CR2025 Lithium Battery.  
Do not use a battery other than the CR2025.  
Press the top side: M/MARK1 button  
Press the bottom side: m/MARK2 button  
Press the left side: </IN button  
Press the right side: ,/OUT button  
Press the middle: SET button  
1
Hold down the lock lever 1, and then pull out the  
battery holder 2.  
b THUMBNAIL key  
This has the same function as the THUMBNAIL button on  
the main unit.  
c CHARACTER key  
Each press of this key turns the character information  
superimposed on the monitor screen on and off, or  
switches to the LCD.  
2
d SUB CLIP key  
This has the same function as the SUB CLIP button on the  
1
main unit.  
2
Insert a new battery with the + symbol facing upward  
(1), and then push the battery holder until it clicks  
(2).  
Note  
Pressing this key has no effect when no clip list is  
registered.  
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Face the + symbol upward.  
2
1
WARNING  
Battery may explode if mistreated. Do not recharge,  
disassemble or dispose of in fire.  
CAUTION  
Danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced.  
Replace only with the same or equivalent type  
recommended by the manufacturer.  
Dispose of used batteries according to the manufacturer’s  
instructions.  
Battery lifetime  
When the lithium battery output falls, even button presses  
may not operate. The average lithium battery lifetime is  
about one year, but this depends on the pattern of use.  
If pressing the remote control buttons produces absolutely  
no effect on this unit, replace the battery, then check the  
operation again.  
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Preparations  
2
Chapter  
When installing the installation space must be secured in  
consideration of the ventilation and service operation.  
• Do not block the ventilation slots at the left side and right  
side panels, and vents of fans.  
• Leave a space around the unit for ventilation.  
• Leave more than 10 cm of space in the rear of the unit to  
secure the operation area.  
1
Power the unit on.  
“SYSTEM SEL” appears in the time data display  
section.  
SYSTEM SEL  
SYSTEM FREQ:  
60I  
50I  
30P  
25P  
When the unit is installed on the desk or the like, leave at  
least 5 cm of space in the left and right sides.  
Setting the System  
Frequency  
SELECT : ( )( )KEY  
DATA SET :  
SET KEY  
2
3
Press the M/MARK1 button or the m/MARK2 button  
This unit is shipped with the system frequency still unset.  
Therefore, you need to set the system frequency before  
using the unit. (The unit cannot be used unless the system  
frequency is set.)  
Once it is set, the system frequency is retained even when  
the unit is powered off.  
to select the system frequency to use.  
Press the SET button.  
“NOW SAVING...” appears in the time data display  
section, and the modified setting is saved in the unit’s  
memory.  
“COMPLETE ! !” appears when save processing  
finishes.  
To set the system frequency  
Use the following procedure.  
If you have selected 60I or 30P  
When you press the SET button with 60I or 30P  
selected in step 2, the following screen appears.  
Rear panel  
POWER  
POWER  
switch  
SYSTEM SEL  
1
2
SYSTEM FREQ : 601  
UC/J SELECT :  
UC  
UCP  
J
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
0
0
TCG  
EXT  
-12  
-20  
-12  
-20  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
-30  
-40  
-60  
-30  
-40  
-60  
ACCESS  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
1
2
3
4
VAR  
MARK1  
+
NETWORK  
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
MPEG HD  
SP  
VITC  
1080 60I  
COOO1  
LOCAL  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
P2  
00:00.00:00  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
SELECT : ( )( )KEY  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
DATA SET :  
SET KEY  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
Press the M/MARK1 and m/MARK2 buttons to select  
“UC” (for areas outside Japan) or “J” (for Japan), then  
press the SET button.  
Time data display section  
4
3
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Note  
Removing the Connector  
Covers  
Be sure to carry out step 3 before powering the unit  
off. The new system frequency setting will not be  
saved if you power off without carrying out step 3.  
4
Press the on/standby switch to put the unit into  
standby, and then press it again to power the unit on.  
When the unit is shipped from the factory, connector  
covers are attached to the following connectors.  
• AUDIO OUTPUT 1/3 and 2/4 connectors  
• HDSDI INPUT connector  
The selected system frequency becomes available for  
use.  
• HDSDI OUTPUT connectors  
• SDSDI OUTPUT connector  
• RS232C connector  
You can change the system frequency setting by using the  
setup menu item OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >SYSTEM  
SEL >SYSTEM FREQ.  
For details about the setup menu, see page 67 “System  
Menu” in Chapter 6.  
To use one of these connectors, remove the cover as  
follows.  
3
2
1
REF VIDEO INPUT  
COMPOSITE OUT  
AUDIO MONITOR  
TIME CODE  
IN OUT  
-AC IN  
R
L
POWER  
AUDIO INPUT  
2/4  
AUDIO OUTPUT  
2/4  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
1/2  
1/2  
3/4  
3/4  
1/3  
1/3  
(AES/EBU)  
INPUT  
OUTPUT  
HDSDI INPUT  
HDSDI OUTPUT  
SDSDI OUTPUT  
1
2
MONITOR  
RS232C  
REMOTE(9P)  
S400  
CONTROL  
3
2
2 3  
1
2
3
Press the POWER (main power) switch to power the  
unit off.  
Remove the screw(s) of the connector cover, using a  
screwdriver that matches the grooves of the screw(s).  
Remove the connector cover.  
Save the screw(s) and cover, so that you can reattach  
the cover if necessary.  
23  
Removing the Connector Covers  
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Caution  
Connections and  
Settings  
These connectors are designed to allow direct contact with  
conductive circuits. Weak voltage may be present because  
of a failure in this unit. To prevent patients from touching  
these connectors accidentally, attach the connector covers  
when the connectors are not being used to connect to other  
devices.  
Note  
Production of some of the peripherals and related devices  
described in this chapter has been discontinued.  
For advice about choosing devices, please contact your  
Sony dealer or a Sony sales representative.  
Connecting an External Monitor  
You can connect a video monitor to this unit’s video output  
connectors or to the MONITOR connector. The following  
figure shows an example using a Sony multi-format LCD  
monitor.  
You can also superimpose character information such as  
timecode and the unit’s operating status on output video.  
29).  
To view HD video  
Connect an HD video monitor using method 1 or 2 in  
the following figure.  
When you connect a monitor with method 2, set the setup  
menu item INTERFACE SELECT >D-SUB OUTPUT to  
“YPbPr” (see page 70).  
24  
Connections and Settings  
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PDW-70MD (this unit)  
REF VIDEO INPUT  
COMPOSITE OUT  
AUDIO MONITOR  
TIME CODE  
IN OUT  
-AC IN  
R
L
POWER  
AUDIO INPUT  
2/4  
AUDIO OUTPUT  
2/4  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
1/2  
1/2  
3/4  
3/4  
1/3  
1/3  
(AES/EBU)  
COMPOSITE  
OUT  
INPUT  
PDW-70MD (this unit)  
REF VIDEO INPUT  
OMPOSITE OUT  
AUDIO MONITOR  
TIME CODE  
IN OUT  
OUTPUT  
-AC IN  
R
L
POWER  
HDSDI INPUT  
HDSDI OUTPUT  
SDSDI OUTPUT  
1
2
MONITOR  
RS232C  
REMOTE(9P)  
S400  
CONTROL  
AUDIO INPUT  
AUDIO OUTPUT  
2/4  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
1/2  
1/2  
3/4  
3/4  
1/3  
2/4  
1/3  
(AES/EBU)  
INPUT  
HDSDI  
OUTPUT  
MONITOR  
OUTPUT  
HDSDI INPUT  
HDSDI OUTPUT  
SDSDI OUTPUT  
1
2
MONITOR  
RS232C  
REMOTE(9P)  
S400  
CONTROL  
2
1
SDSDI  
OUTPUT  
2
SDI signal input  
connector  
Y/P /P  
connectors  
1
B
R
a)  
SDI signal input  
connector  
COMPOSITE  
IN connector  
a)  
MEU-WX2 Multi-Format Engine  
MEU-WX2 Multi-Format Engine  
LMD-172W/232W Multi-Format LCD Monitor  
a) To input HDSDI signals, a BKM-243HS (not supplied) is required.  
LMD-172W/232W Multi-Format LCD Monitor  
Connection method and connection cables  
a) To input SDSDI signals, a BKM-220D (not supplied) is required.  
Connection method Connection cables (not  
supplied)  
Connection method and connection cables  
1 HDSDI  
75Ω coaxial cable  
2 Component  
D-Sub 15-pin – analog  
component cable, phono plug –  
stereo miniplug cable  
Connection method  
Connection cables (not  
supplied)  
(Y/P /P )  
B
R
1
2
SDSDI  
75Ω coaxial cable  
Composite  
75Ω coaxial cable, phono  
plug – stereo miniplug cable  
To view SD video  
Connect an SD video monitor using method 1 or 2 in the  
following figure.  
Using PDZ-1 Over an i.LINK  
Connection (FAM Connection)  
You can use the supplied PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software  
to do simple editing of proxy AV data. The following  
explains how to make an i.LINK connection between this  
unit and a computer with PDZ-1 installed, and how to  
access this unit by FAM (file access mode).  
Notes  
• The required FAM driver is also installed when you  
install the PDZ-1 software.  
25  
Connections and Settings  
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• This unit’s S400 connector has 6 pins. Check the  
number of pins on the i.LINK connector of your  
notebook computer, and use an appropriate i.LINK  
cable.  
XLR cable  
Ferrite core (supplied)  
120 to 150 mm  
See “Using PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software” in Chapter  
4 (page 61) for more information about installing the  
PDZ-1 software. See the online help of PDZ-1 for more  
information about using PDZ-1.  
Some limitations apply to FAM connections.  
When the diameter of the XLR cable is too large  
to loop  
If the diameter of the XLR cable is so large that is difficult  
to loop the cable through the ferrite core, simply pass it  
through the core without looping. In this case, use a  
binding strap (not supplied) to at the specified position, as  
shown in the figure below.  
PDW-70MD (this unit)  
REF VIDEO INPUT  
COMPOSITE OUT  
AUDIO MONITOR  
TIME CODE  
IN OUT  
-AC IN  
R
L
POWER  
AUDIO INPUT  
2/4  
AUDIO OUTPUT  
2/4  
DIGITAL  
AUDIO  
1/2  
1/2  
3/4  
3/4  
1/3  
1/3  
(AES/EBU)  
INPUT  
OUTPUT  
HDSDI INPUT  
HDSDI OUTPUT  
1
SDSDI OUTPUT  
2
MONITOR  
RS232C  
REMOTE(9P)  
S400  
CONTROL  
120 to 150 mm  
S400  
XLR cable  
i.LINK cable  
(not supplied)  
Binding strap  
(not supplied)  
i.LINK (IEEE1394) connector  
Laptop computer  
Ferrite core (supplied)  
On the computer  
On this unit  
Install PDZ-1.  
Set the setup menu item  
INTERFACE SELECT >i.LINK  
MODE to “FAM(PC REMOTE)”  
Note  
This unit will not meet the requirements of the CISPR 22  
Class B electromagnetic interference standards if ferrite  
cores are not attached to XLR cables.  
Using XLR Cables (Audio Cables)  
Before connecting XLR cables to this unit's analog audio  
input and output connectors, always attach the supplied  
ferrite cores to the XLR cables. Attach as shown below.  
To attach the ferrite core  
Loop the XLR cable one time through the ferrite core, on  
the side closest to the connector that is connected to this  
unit, and fix the ferrite core at the specified position.  
26  
Connections and Settings  
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External Synchronization Setup  
This unit synchronizes as shown in the following table,  
according to the presence or absence of signals input to the  
HDSDI INPUT connector, the presence or absence of  
signals input to the REF VIDEO INPUT connector, and  
the setting of the V INPUT item on the HOME page of the  
function menu (see page 65).  
The principal setup operations before operating this unit  
are carried out using setup menus.  
This section explains how to set the date and time and how  
to adjust the brightness of the LCD panel.  
See Chapter 6 “Menus” (page 65) for more information  
about menu operations and menu items.  
Signal  
input to  
HDSDI  
INPUT  
Signal  
V INPUT External  
setting synchronization  
input to  
REF VIDEO  
INPUT  
Setting the Date and Time  
connector connector  
When using this unit for the first time, you should set the  
date and time as follows.  
Yes  
Yes  
HDSDI  
SG  
Synchronize to REF  
VIDEO input  
Synchronize to REF  
VIDEO input  
Note  
Yes  
No  
HDSDI  
SG  
Synchronize to  
HDSDI input  
Before starting, press the DISPLAY button to set the  
monitor video section to its largest size. Or connect an  
external video monitor to this unit and superimpose menus  
(see page 29) on the monitor screen.  
No external  
synchronization  
No  
No  
Yes  
No  
HDSDI  
SG  
Synchronize to REF  
VIDEO input  
1,4 3 2,3  
HDSDI  
SG  
No external  
synchronization  
EJECT  
F1  
0
0
TCG  
EXT  
-12  
-20  
-12  
-20  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
-30  
-40  
-60  
-30  
-40  
-60  
ACCESS  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
Note  
1
2
3
4
VAR  
MARK1  
+
NETWORK  
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
MPEG HD  
SP  
VITC  
1080 60I  
COOO1  
LOCAL  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
P2  
00:00.00:00  
PAGE DISPLAY  
There is no external synchronization for file operations by  
FAM connection.  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
4 3  
3
1
2
Press the MENU button.  
The system menu appears on the monitor screen (see  
Select DATE/TIME PRESET using the M/MARK1  
button or m/MARK2 button, then press the ,/OUT  
button.  
The DATE/TIME PRESET screen appears on the  
monitor.  
27  
External Synchronization / Setup  
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DATE/TIME PRESET  
1 5 2,3,4,5  
YEAR  
MONTH  
DAY  
2006  
04  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
0
0
TCG  
EXT  
08  
-12  
-20  
-12  
-20  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
-30  
-40  
-60  
-30  
-40  
-60  
ACCESS  
TIME 10:09:17  
TIME ZONE UTC_00:00  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
1
2
3
4
VAR  
MARK1  
+
NETWORK  
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
MPEG HD  
SP  
VITC  
1080 60I  
COOO1  
LOCAL  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
P2  
00:00.00:00  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
INC/DEC : JOG DIAL  
SHIFT : ( )( )KEY  
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
DATE SAVE : SET KEY  
TO MENU : MENU KEY  
6 5  
5
This screen allows you to set the following items.  
YEAR: Calendar year  
MONTH: Month  
DAY: Day  
TIME: Time  
1
2
Press the MENU button.  
The system menu appears on the monitor screen (see  
TIME ZONE: Time zone (difference from UTC)  
Select SETUP MENU using the M/MARK1 button or  
m/MARK2 button, then press the ,/OUT button.  
3
Set the date, time and time zone.  
You can change the setting of the flashing digits.  
The setup menu appears on the monitor screen (see  
To change the flashing digits  
Use the arrow buttons (</IN, ,/OUT).  
3
4
Select DISPLAY CONTROL using the M/MARK1  
button or m/MARK2 button, then press the ,/OUT  
button.  
To increase or decrease the values of the flashing  
digits  
Use the arrow buttons (M/MARK1, m/MARK2) or jog  
dial.  
The DISPLAY CONTROL menu appears on the  
monitor screen (see page 69).  
To return the settings to the initial values  
Press the RESET button.  
Select BRIGHTNESS using the M/MARK1 button or  
m/MARK2 button, then press the ,/OUT button.  
The LCD BRIGHTNESS screen appears on the  
monitor.  
4
When you have made the necessary settings, press the  
SET button.  
The message “NOW SAVING...” appears, the settings  
are saved, and the menu closes.  
SETUP MENU  
LCD BRIGHTNESS  
preset :55H  
To clear the menu from the screen without saving  
settings  
55 (HEX)  
Press the MENU button twice in succession.  
SHIFT : ( )( )KEY  
INC/DEC : JOG DIAL  
TO MENU : MENU KEY  
Adjusting the Brightness of the LCD  
Panel  
5
Adjust the brightness while viewing the screen.  
Proceed as follows to adjust the brightness of the LCD  
panel.  
You can change the values of digits which flash in the  
settings screen. Setting values are hexadecimal (00 to  
7F (HEX)).  
Note  
Before starting, press the DISPLAY button to set the  
monitor video section to its largest size. Or connect an  
external video monitor to this unit and superimpose menus  
(see page 29) on the monitor screen.  
To change the flashing digits  
Use the arrow buttons (</IN, ,/OUT).  
28  
Setup  
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To increase or decrease the values of the flashing  
digits  
Superimposed Text  
Information  
Use the arrow buttons (M/MARK1, m/MARK2) or jog  
dial.  
To return the settings to the factory defaults  
Press the RESET button.  
The HDSDI signals output from the HDSDI OUTPUT 1  
and 2 connectors and the MONITOR connector, the  
SDSDI signals output from the SDSDI OUTPUT  
connector, and the composite signals output from the  
COMPOSITE OUT connector can contain superimposed  
text information, including timecode, menu settings, and  
alarm messages.  
6
When you are finished making adjustments, press the  
SET button.  
The message “NOW SAVING...” appears, the settings  
are saved, and the menu closes.  
To clear the menu from the screen without saving  
adjustments  
Press the MENU button twice in succession.  
To turn superimposed text on and off  
Set the CHAR SEL item on page P1 of the function menu.  
ON: Display superimposed text.  
OFF: Do not display superimposed text.  
LCD: Display superimposed text on the LCD panel of this  
unit, but do not display it on an external video monitor  
connected to this unit.  
Note  
Even when ON is selected, you can forcibly turn off the  
superimposition of character information in HD output by  
setting the SETUP MENU >DISPLAY CONTROL >HD  
CHARA item.  
Information displayed  
1 Type of time data  
2 Timecode reader drop  
a)  
frame mark  
3 Timecode generator drop  
a)  
frame mark  
Time data  
4 VITC field mark  
T C R  
0 0  
:
0 4  
.
4 7  
.
0 7 *  
P L A Y  
L O C K  
5 Operation mode  
a) Only when the system frequency is 60I/30P.  
a Type of time data  
Display Meaning  
CNT  
TCR  
UBR  
Counter data  
TC reader timecode data  
TC reader user bits data  
29  
Superimposed Text Information  
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Display Meaning  
Display  
Block A  
PREV  
Operation mode  
TCR.  
UBR.  
TCG  
UBG  
IN  
VITC reader timecode  
Block B  
VITC reader user bits data  
TC generator timecode  
Cuing up to the first  
frame of the current  
clip.  
TC generator user bits data  
In point time data  
F.FWD  
F.REV  
PLAY  
Fast forward search  
Fast reverse search  
OUT  
DUR  
Out point time data  
Playback mode  
(servo unlocked)  
Duration between In point and Out point  
PLAY  
REC  
LOCK  
Playback mode  
(servo locked)  
Note  
Record mode  
(servo unlocked)  
If the time data or user bits cannot be read correctly, they  
will be displayed with an asterisk. For example, “T*R”,  
“U*R”, “T*R.” or “U*R.”.  
REC  
LOCK  
STILL  
FWD  
REV  
Record mode  
(servo locked)  
JOG  
A still picture in jog  
mode  
b Timecode reader drop-frame mark (for system  
frequency 60I/30P only)  
“.”: Indicates drop-frame mode  
JOG  
Jog mode in  
forward direction  
“:”: Indicates non-drop-frame mode  
JOG  
Jog mode in  
reverse direction  
c Timecode generator drop-frame mark (for system  
frequency 60I/30P only)  
“.”: Indicates drop-frame mode (factory default)  
“:”: Indicates non-drop-frame mode  
SHUTTLE  
STILL  
A still picture in  
shuttle mode  
SHUTTLE  
VAR  
(Speed)  
(Speed)  
Shuttle mode  
Variable speed  
mode  
d VITC field mark  
“ ” (blank): Fields 1 and 3 (for system frequency 60I/30P)  
or fields 1, 3, 5 and 7 (for system frequency 50I/25P)  
“*”: Fields 2 and 4 (for system frequency 60I/30P) or  
fields 2, 4, 6 and 8 (for system frequency 50I/25P)  
TOP 0001/xxxx  
END xxxx/xxxx  
PREROLL  
Cuing up to the first  
frame of the first  
clip.  
Cuing up to the last  
frame of the last  
clip.  
e Operation mode  
The field is divided into two blocks as shown below.  
• Block A displays the operation mode.  
• Block B displays the servo lock status or playback speed.  
Cuing up during  
preroll  
Displaying Supplementary Status  
Information  
B
A
When you set the setup menu item DISPLAY CONTROL  
>SUB STATUS to other than “OFF” (see page 69), you  
can view supplementary status information on the monitor  
screen below the operating mode display area.  
Display  
Operation mode  
Disc is not loaded.  
Block A  
Block B  
DISC OUT  
LOADING  
.
.
T C R  
0 0  
P L A Y  
I N S  
:
0 4  
A 1  
4 7  
L O C K  
3 4 T C  
0 7  
Disc is being  
loaded.  
2
V
UNLOADING  
Disc is being  
unloaded.  
Supplementary status information  
STANDBY OFF  
STOP  
Standby-off mode  
Stop mode  
The following items of supplementary status information  
are displayed depending on the setting of the menu item  
SUB STATUS.  
NEXT  
Cuing up to the first  
frame of the next  
clip.  
30  
Superimposed Text Information  
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Setting of menu item  
SUB STATUS  
Items of supplementary  
information displayed  
TC MODE  
REMAIN  
CLIP NO  
Operating mode of the internal  
timecode generator  
Amount of free capacity on the  
disc (in minute units).  
Clip number  
The following tables show the on-screen indications of  
supplementary information and their meaning.  
When the menu item SUB STATUS is set to “TC  
MODE”:  
On-screen  
indication  
Meaning  
INT PRST FREE  
The internal timecode generator is  
operating in FREE RUN mode.  
INT PRST REC  
The internal timecode generator is  
operating in REC RUN mode.  
INT REGEN-T&U The internal timecode generator is in  
synchronization with the playback  
timecode (LTC) read from disc.  
EXT LTC-T&U  
The internal timecode generator is in  
synchronization with the external  
timecode (LTC) input to the unit and is  
generating the same timecode values  
and user bit values as those of the  
external timecode (regeneration).  
EXT VITC-T&U  
The internal timecode generator is in  
synchronization with VITC present in  
the external video signal input to the  
unit and is generating the same  
timecode values and user bit values as  
those of the external timecode  
(regeneration).  
EXT DVIN-T&U  
The internal timecode generator is in  
synchronization with the external  
timecode input to the unit via the  
S400 connector and is generating the  
same timecode values and user bit  
values as those of the external  
timecode (regeneration).  
EXT DVIN.V-T&U The internal timecode generator is in  
synchronization with the external VITC  
input to the unit via the S400  
connector interface and is generating  
the same timecode values and user bit  
values as those of the external  
timecode (regeneration).  
When the menu item SUB STATUS is set to  
“REMAIN”:  
On-screen  
indication  
Meaning  
REMAIN 120 min  
Remaining capacity of the disc in  
minutes. When the remaining capacity  
has not been calculated, “REMAIN ---  
min” appears.  
31  
Superimposed Text Information  
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Recording and Playback  
3
Chapter  
• Do not leave cartridges where dust may get inside.  
• Store cartridges in their cases.  
Handling Discs  
Care of the discs  
• Remove dust and dirt on the outside of a cartridge using  
a soft dry cloth.  
• If condensation forms, allow ample time to dry before  
use.  
Discs Used for Recording and  
Playback  
This unit uses the following disc for recording and  
playback:  
Write-Protecting Discs  
1)  
PFD23 Professional Disc (capacity 23.3 GB)  
To protect the content recorded on the disc from accidental  
erasure, move the Write Inhibit tab on the lower surface of  
the disc in the direction of the arrow, as shown in the  
following figure.  
1) Professional Disc is a trademark of Sony Corporation  
Note  
It is not possible to use the following discs for recording or  
playback:  
Lower surface of the disc  
Write Inhibit tab  
• Blu-ray Disc  
• Professional Disc for Data  
Notes on Handling  
Handling  
The Professional Disc is housed in a cartridge, and is  
designed to allow handling free of risk from dust or  
fingerprints. However, if the cartridge is subjected to a  
severe shock, for example by dropping it, this can result in  
damage or scratching of the disc. If the disc is scratched, it  
may be impossible to record video/audio, or to play back  
the content recorded on the disc. The discs should be  
handled and stored carefully.  
• Do not touch the surface of the disc itself within the  
cartridge.  
• Deliberately opening the shutter may cause damage.  
• Do not disassemble the cartridge.  
E
V
A
S
Slide in the direction of the arrow  
Write Inhibit tab settings  
SAVE  
SAVE  
Recording disabled  
Recording enabled  
You can also write protect individual clips. For details, see  
• The supplied adhesive labels are recommended for  
indexing discs. Apply the label in the correct position.  
Loading and Unloading a Disc  
Storage  
• Do not store discs where they may be subjected to direct  
sunlight, or in other places where the temperature or  
humidity is high.  
When the on/standby switch indicator is lit green, you can  
load and unload a disc as shown in the following figure.  
32  
Handling Discs  
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3
4
Select “DISC MENU” using the M/MARK1 button or  
On/standby switch and indicator  
m/MARK2 button, then press the ,/OUT button.  
Select “FORMAT” using the m/MARK2 button, then  
press the ,/OUT button.  
To unload  
Press the EJECT button.  
The menu item QUICK FORMAT is selected.  
5
6
Press the ,/OUT button.  
The message “QUICK FORMAT OK?” appears.  
To cancel a disc format  
Press the RESET button to return to the state of step 3.  
To clear the menu from the screen, carry out step 7.  
Press the SET button.  
To load  
Insert a disc face up.  
The disc is drawn in.  
The format starts.  
The message “FORMAT COMPLETED.” appears  
when formatting of the disc is completed.  
The disc slot indicator flashes orange when you insert a  
disc, and lights blue when the disc is completely loaded.  
The indicator flashes blue when you eject a disc, and goes  
out when the disc is completely ejected.  
If you want to continue by formatting another disc  
When the message “FORMAT COMPLETED.”  
appears, press the EJECT button to eject the disc.  
Insert the next disc to format, and press the SET button  
when the message “QUICK FORMAT OK?” appears.  
Formatting a Disc  
7
Press the MENU button to clear the menu from the  
screen.  
Unused discs are formatted automatically when they are  
loaded into this unit.  
To format a recorded disc, load the disc into the unit, then  
proceed as follows.  
Handling of Discs When Recording  
Does Not End Normally (Salvage  
Functions)  
Note  
When a recorded disc is formatted, all the data on the disc  
is erased. (Locked clips (see page 41) are also erased.)  
Recording processing does not end normally if, for  
example, the POWER switch on the rear panel is turned off  
during recording, or if the power cord is disconnected  
during recording. Because the file system is not updated,  
video and audio data recorded in real time is not  
recognized as files and clip contents recorded up to that  
point are lost.  
1 2,7 3,4,5  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
ACCESS  
F3  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
LOCAL  
MENU  
F4  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
F5  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
However, this unit has salvage functions which can hold  
losses to the minimum by reconstructing clips on such  
discs.  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
There is a quick salvage function which executes  
automatically and a full salvage function which you can  
execute as required.  
6
Quick salvage: Clips are reconstructed on the basis of  
backup data stored in nonvolatile memory and  
markers recorded on the disc. Processing time is about  
5 seconds.  
1
2
Press the DISPLAY button to maximize the monitor  
video section.  
Press the MENU button.  
Quick salvage executes automatically if the unit is  
powered on with a disc still loaded after recording  
was interrupted by power off.  
The system menu appears on the display.  
33  
Handling Discs  
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Full salvage: Clips are reconstructed on the basis of  
markers recorded on the disc. Nonvolatile memory  
cannot be used, so processing takes longer than for a  
quick salvage (about 30 seconds, although it depends  
on the state of the disc).  
• This operation cannot be cancelled once it begins.  
Press the SET button.  
2
Processing begins and the message “Executing.”  
appears.  
When processing finishes, a message appears to  
display the results.  
If the message reads “Incomplete!”, the clips that  
failed were lost.  
You are prompted to execute a full salvage whenever  
you insert a disc that was removed manually from a  
powered off device after interruption of recording by  
power off.  
Note that no recorded clip contents are lost when the on/  
standby switch on the front panel is set to standby during  
recording, because the unit does not enter standby mode  
until after the end of recording processing.  
Notes  
• Even after recording finishes, do not set the POWER  
switch on the rear panel to off until the ACCESS  
indicator has gone out.  
• These functions salvage as much recorded material as  
possible after an unforeseen accident, but 100%  
restoration cannot be guaranteed.  
• Even when these functions are used, it is not possible to  
recover data from immediately before the interruption of  
recording. The amount of data lost is as follows.  
Quick salvage: From 2 to 4 seconds of data before the  
interruption of recording.  
Full salvage: From 4 to 6 seconds of data before the  
interruption of recording.  
• You are prompted to execute a full salvage every time  
you insert a disc that has not been salvaged, or power the  
unit on with such as disc loaded.  
• No recording is possible on discs containing clips that  
have not been salvaged, although it is possible to play  
back the normally recorded sections. Recording  
becomes possible if you perform a quick format, but this  
erases all of the original recorded content.  
To restore clips with a full salvage  
1
Insert the disc on which recording did not end  
normally.  
The message “Salvage ?” appears on the display.  
To cancel the clip salvage  
Press the RESET button.  
Notes  
• The message “EJECT?” appears when “REC INH”  
is displayed in the operation modes section of the  
display. If the disc is write protected, eject the disc,  
set the Write Inhibit tab to enable recording, and  
then insert the disc again. If REC INH on page P1 of  
the function menu is set to “ON”, set it to “OFF” (see  
34  
Handling Discs  
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Carrying Out Recording  
Recording  
One recording segment (from the start to the end of  
recording) is called a “clip”.  
This section describes video and audio recording on the  
unit.  
See Chapter 4 “Scene Selection” for more information  
about clips.  
See page 65 “Function Menu” in Chapter 6 for more  
information about function menu operations.  
1
more information about setup menu operations.  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
ACCESS  
F3  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
LOCAL  
MENU  
F4  
F5  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
Note  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
It is not possible to combine material recorded in different  
system frequencies and audio recording formats on a  
single disc (although different bit rates may be combined).  
If you attempt to record material in a system frequency or  
audio recording format that differs from that of existing  
recorded material on the disc, “REC INH” appears on the  
display and recording is inhibited.  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
3 2  
1
2
Insert a disc.  
Make the following settings and adjustments before  
starting to record.  
Recording format settings: See the next section “To set  
the video and audio recording formats”.  
Hold down the REC button, and press the PLAY  
button.  
Recording starts.  
Video input signal selection: Select with V INPUT on the  
HOME page of the function menu.  
3
To stop recording, press the STOP button.  
Audio input signal selection: Select with A1 INPUT to  
A4 INPUT on the HOME page of the function menu.  
Remote/local setting: Set the remote control switch. If  
you set it to REMOTE, also set the setup menu item  
INTERFACE SELECT >REMOTE I/F (“REMOTE”  
and the connector used appear on the display).  
If the disc becomes full  
Recording stops and the message “ALARM DISC END.”  
appears on the monitor.  
Notes  
• The shortest clip that can be recorded is 2 seconds long.  
Even if recording start and stop operations are performed  
within 2 seconds, a 2-second clip is recorded.  
• The maximum number of clips that can be recorded is  
300. If the loaded disc already contains 300 clips,  
recording with the REC button is not possible. (The  
message “Disc Full!” appears in the time data display  
section.)  
To set the video and audio recording  
formats  
To set the video recording format  
Set the video bit rate (compression method) by setting  
OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >REC FORMAT in the  
setup menu to one of the following.  
• During recording, do not turn off the POWER switch on  
the rear panel or disconnect the power cord. This could  
cause the clip being recorded to be lost. For details, see  
Menu setting/display  
Video bit rate  
VBR 35 Mbps  
CBR 25 Mbps  
VBR 18 Mbps  
HQ  
SP  
LP  
To set the audio recording format  
Set AUDIO CONTROL >REC MODE in the setup menu  
to one of the following.  
Menu setting Display  
Audio recording  
format  
2ch×16bit  
4ch×16bit  
2CH 16BIT  
4CH 16BIT  
2 channels/16 bits  
4 channels/16 bits  
35  
Recording  
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Playback  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
ACCESS  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
LOCAL  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLAY  
This section describes playback of video and audio on the  
unit.  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
Before starting playback, make the following setting.  
Remote/local setting: Set the remote control switch. If  
you set it to REMOTE, also set the setup menu item  
INTERFACE SELECT >REMOTE I/F (“REMOTE”  
and the connector used appear on the display).  
PREV button  
PLAY button  
NEXT button  
STOP button  
M/MARK1 button and m/MARK2 button  
Jog dial  
Shuttle dial  
Disc playback start position  
Although this unit uses optical discs, it is designed to offer  
the most convenient features of tape playback by VTRs.  
To start playback  
Press the PLAY button.  
Playback starts.  
When two or more clips are recorded on the disc, they are  
played back continuously.  
After playback stop  
The unit stops at the position where the STOP button was  
pressed.  
Press the PLAY button to resume playback at the stop  
position.  
To jump to the next or previous clip, then start  
playback  
After recording  
Use the PREV button, NEXT button, jog dial, or shuttle  
dial.  
The unit stops at the position where recording ended.  
To play back a clip, press the PREV button to move to the  
start frame of any clip, or press the PREV button with the  
PLAY button held down to move to any position.  
To stop playback  
Press the STOP button.  
If you play back to the end of the last clip, playback  
automatically stops.  
If, in this state, you press the PLAY button, the message  
“ALARM DISC END.” appears on the display.  
To carry out playback again, move back to the desired clip  
using the PREV button, jog dial or shuttle dial.  
After disc insertion  
The unit stops at the position of the disc when it was most  
recently ejected.  
Press the PLAY button to resume playback at the most  
recent position.  
The playback position is saved to the disc when the disc is  
ejected, which allows playback to start at that position  
whenever it is loaded into any XDCAM player.  
To set shot marks  
While playing back a disc, you can set essence marks such  
as SHOT MARK1 and SHOT MARK2 in desired frames.  
To set a SHOT MARK1 or SHOT MARK2, hold down the  
M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button and press the SET  
button.  
Note  
This function is not available when the Write Inhibit tab of  
the disc is set to the recording disabled position, and when  
REC INH on page P1 of the function menu is set to “ON”.  
Note  
To erase or change essence marks, use the supplied  
PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software.  
Playback Operation  
First insert a disc.  
Searching for Clips With Thumbnails  
(Thumbnail Search)  
You can display thumbnail images (index pictures) of all  
clips on the disc, and use them to cue up a desired clip.  
36  
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• Press the arrow buttons.  
• Turn the jog or shuttle dial.  
• Press the PREV or NEXT button: Move to the  
previous or next thumbnail.  
• Press the TOP (SHIFT + PREV) or END (SHIFT +  
NEXT) button: Move to the first or last thumbnail.  
• Holding down the SHIFT button, press the M/  
MARK1 or m/MARK2 button: Display the previous  
or next page.  
To display a list of thumbnail images  
With the SUB CLIP button off, press the THUMBNAIL  
button, turning it on.  
A list appears showing thumbnails of 12 clips on the disc,  
including the clip being currently played back. (In the  
following description, this is referred to as the “thumbnail  
screen”. )  
Name of currently  
selected clip  
Sixth clip is selected from  
a total of 34 clips.  
a)  
2
Press the SET button or the PLAY button.  
Thumbnail (index picture) of  
currently selected clip  
If you press the SET button, a still image appears  
showing the first frame of the selected clip.  
If you press the PLAY button, playback starts from the  
first frame of the selected clip.  
b)  
Note  
The factory default setting for the clip thumbnail is  
such that the first frame of the clip is used as the  
thumbnail but you can change this setting so that any  
desired frame is used as the clip thumbnail see “To  
However, clip list playback always starts from the first  
frame, regardless of the thumbnail.  
Total length of selected clip  
Recording date and  
time of selected clip  
To change the clip information displayed in  
the thumbnail list  
Clip information (recording date and time, initial timecode,  
total length, and so on)  
With the thumbnail list displayed, proceed as follows.  
a) When a title has been assigned to a clip (see page 47), the title is enclosed  
in double quotation marks, for example “TITLE00001”.  
b) A mark is shown to indicate that the thumbnail (index picture) is not the  
first frame of the clip. (See “To change a thumbnail image (index  
1
2
3
Press the CLIP MENU (SHIFT + SUB CLIP) button  
or the MENU button to display the clip menu.  
To return to the original screen  
Press the M/MARK1 button or m/MARK2 button to  
select CLIP INFORMATION.  
Press the THUMBNAIL button, turning it off.  
In any of the following screens, you can press the  
THUMBNAIL button to return to the original screen.  
Press the SET button.  
A list of CLIP INFORMATION items appears.  
DATE: Date and time of recording  
TIME CODE: Timecode of the first frame in the clip  
DURATION: Recording time  
To select a thumbnail image and start  
playback  
SEQUENCE NUMBER: Thumbnail sequence  
number  
2
(page 37) for more information about sequence  
thumbnail numbers.  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
ACCESS  
F3  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
LOCAL  
MENU  
F4  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
F5  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
“TIME CODE” is selected when the unit is shipped  
from the factory.  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
4
Press the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select an  
item that you want to display as part of the clip  
information, and then press the SET button.  
1
1 1  
1
1
Do one of the following to select the thumbnail of the  
clip you want to cue up.  
The selected item is displayed as clip information  
under the thumbnail image.  
37  
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To change a thumbnail image (index  
picture)  
Mark indicating that the thumbnail is not the first frame  
With the thumbnail list displayed, proceed as follows.  
1
2
Press the CLIP MENU (SHIFT + SUB CLIP) button  
or the MENU button to display the clip menu.  
Press the M/MARK1 button, m/MARK2 button , </  
IN button, or ,/OUT button to select SET INDEX  
PICTURE.  
3
4
Press the SET button.  
“SET INDEX” appears in the upper left of the screen.  
Note  
When you press the SET button or the PLAY button  
after selecting a clip with this mark displayed, the clip  
is not cued up to the position of the thumbnail. It is  
always cued up to the first frame.  
Select the clip whose thumbnail you want to change  
(you can do this with the same operations as step 1 of  
5
Press the SET button.  
Searching With the Expand Function  
An enlargement of the current thumbnail image  
appears.  
The expand function allows you to divide a selected clip  
into 12 blocks, and to display thumbnails of the first frame  
in each block in the thumbnail list. This function is  
available whenever the thumbnail list is displayed. This  
function allows you to quickly review the content of the  
selected clip, and to search efficiently for a target scene.  
You can repeat the expand operation up to three times  
(t 12 blocks t 144 blocks t 1,728 blocks).  
6
7
Press the PLAY button or use the jog or shuttle dial to  
play back the clip and display the frame that you want  
to use as the thumbnail image.  
Note  
To cancel the thumbnail image change  
Press the RESET button.  
The maximum number of blocks may be larger than 1,728  
when the recorded duration of the clip is short. In this case,  
the frame interval of expanded thumbnails is fixed at 1  
frame. This allows you to view expanded thumbnails at  
equal intervals.  
Press the SET button.  
This returns you to the thumbnail list. The specified  
image appears as the thumbnail of the selected clip.  
A mark is shown to indicate that the thumbnail is not  
the first frame of the clip.  
To execute the expand function  
1
2
With the thumbnail list displayed, select the clip that  
contains the scene that you want to find.  
Press the EXPAND (F5) button.  
The selected clip is divided into 12 blocks, and the first  
frame of each block appears in the thumbnail list.  
38  
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The essence mark selection screen appears.  
Number of blocks  
Essence marks not recorded on the disc are displayed  
in gray.  
3
As required, repeat step 2 once or twice.  
To return to the thumbnail list screen  
Press the RESET button.  
Note  
Thumbnails cannot be further divided once their  
duration reaches 1 frame.  
2
3
Press the PREV or NEXT button, or press the M/  
MARK1 button or m/MARK2 button, to select the  
desired essence mark.  
To return to the thumbnail list screen of the  
previous level  
Hold down the SHIFT button and press the EXPAND  
button.  
Press the SET button.  
A list appears showing the frames which contain the  
selected essence mark.  
To return to the thumbnail list screen  
Press the RESET button.  
Indicates that this is a list of  
frames containing the essence  
mark (SHOT MARK1)  
Sixth frame is selected from a  
total of 36 SHOT MARK1 frames  
4
When you find the thumbnail of the target scene, press  
the SET button or the PLAY button.  
Frame information (recording date and  
time, timecode, or total length)  
If you press the SET button, a still image appears  
showing the selected frame.  
If you press the PLAY button, playback starts from the  
selected frame.  
Searching for Frames With Essence  
Marks  
Proceed as follows.  
1 3  
Currently selected  
SHOT MARK1 frame  
EJECT  
F1  
Recording date and time of the clip  
containing the selected frame  
Time from selected shot  
mark to next shot mark  
F2  
ACCESS  
F3  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
LOCAL  
MENU  
F4  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
F5  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
4
5
Select the clip whose thumbnail you want to change  
(you can do this with the same operations as step 1 of  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
2 2  
Press the SET button or the PLAY button.  
1
With the SUB CLIP button off, press the ESSENCE  
MARK (SHIFT + THUMBNAIL) button, turning it  
on.  
If you press the SET button, a still image appears  
showing selected essence mark frame.  
39  
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If you press the PLAY button, playback starts from the  
selected essence mark frame.  
To delete shot marks at chapter positions  
You can delete shot marks (SHOT MARK1 and SHOT  
MARK2) at chapter positions in the CHAPTER screen.  
(REC START essence marks cannot be deleted.)  
Searching With the Chapter  
Function  
1
With the CHAPTER screen visible, press the CLIP  
MENU (SHIFT + SUB CLIP) button or MENU button  
to display the clip menu.  
When a clip contains shot marks, you can display them as  
chapter thumbnails.  
2
Select DELETE SHOT MARK.  
See “To set shot marks” (page 36) about how to set shot  
marks.  
“DELETE SHOT MARK” appears in the upper left of  
the screen.  
1
With the thumbnail list visible, select the thumbnail of  
the clip that contains the scenes you want.  
3
4
Select the thumbnail image of the shot mark position  
to delete.  
An “S” mark appears in the upper right of the  
thumbnails of clips which have shot marks set.  
Press the SET button.  
A message appears, asking for confirmation of the  
deletion.  
“S” mark  
5
Press OK to execute the deletion or CANCEL to  
cancel it, and then press the SET button.  
Clip List Playback  
2
Press the CHAPTER (F4) button.  
You can play back clips in the same order as in a clip list  
created using the scene selection function.  
The CHAPTER screen appears, showing thumbnails  
of the frames where the shot marks are set.  
“S1” and “S2” marks on thumbnails indicate frames  
where SHOT MARK1 and SHOT MARK2 marks are  
set.  
See Chapter 4 for more information about scene selection.  
Playing back in clip list order  
Proceed as follows.  
Thumbnails without a mark are frames where REC  
START marks are set.  
1
If the clip list that you want to play exists on the disc,  
load it into the current clip list.  
2
3
Press the SUB CLIP button, turning it on.  
Press the PLAY button.  
Playback begins from the first sub clip in the current  
clip list.  
3
4
Select the clip whose thumbnail you want to change  
(you can do this with the same operations as step 1 of  
Notes  
• Stop the unit before using the SUB CLIP button. Press  
the STOP button if a message appears telling you to stop  
the unit.  
• Depending on the length of sub clips in the clip list and  
their arrangement on the disc, playback may freeze  
momentarily between sub clips.  
Press the SET button or the PLAY button.  
If you press the SET button, a still image appears  
showing selected shot mark frame.  
If you press the PLAY button, playback starts from the  
selected shot mark frame.  
40  
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• Deletion  
To cue up with sub clip thumbnail images  
• Renaming by FAM or FTP  
• Changing the thumbnail image (index picture)  
• Adding and deleting shot marks  
With the desired clip list loaded in the current clip list,  
proceed as follows.  
1
Press the SUB CLIP button and the THUMBNAIL  
button, turning them on.  
Notes  
• Locked clips are deleted along with other clips.  
• Clips cannot be locked or unlocked when the Write  
Inhibit tab of the disc is set to the recording disabled  
position, or when “REC INH” on page P1 of the function  
menu is set to “ON”.  
Thumbnails of the first frames in the sub clips appear.  
Sixth frame is selected from  
a total of 34 sub clips  
a)  
Name of current clip list  
Sub clip information (date and  
time of creation, initial timecode,  
playback time)  
1
With the SUB CLIP button off, press the  
THUMBNAIL button, turning it on.  
The thumbnails of the clips on the disc appear.  
2
Select the clip to lock (you can do this with the same  
operations as step 1 of “To select a thumbnail image  
Clip to be locked  
Currently selected sub clip  
Recording date and time  
of clip list  
Total playback time of sub  
clips in the clip list  
a) When a title has been assigned to a clip list, the title is enclosed in double  
quotation marks, for example “SAKURA”.  
To return to the previous screen  
Press the THUMBNAIL button, turning it off.  
3
4
Press the MENU button.  
The CLIP menu appears.  
2
3
Select the clip whose thumbnail you want to change  
(you can do this with the same operations as step 1 of  
Press the SET button or the PLAY button.  
If you press the SET button, a still image appears  
showing the first frame of the selected sub clip.  
If you press the PLAY button, playback starts from the  
first frame of the selected sub clip.  
Note  
Use the V/MARK1 or v/MARK2 button to select  
“LOCK/UNLOCK CLIP”, and then press the SET  
button.  
In clip lists, the first frame of the sub clip (the In point  
frame) is always displayed as the thumbnail.  
A lock confirmation screen appears. This screen  
displays clip names and clip titles.  
Locking (Write-protecting) Clips  
In the thumbnail screen, you can lock them so that they  
cannot be deleted or altered.  
Locking prevents the following operations on clips.  
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To cancel the lock operation and return to the  
THUMBNAIL screen  
Select “CANCEL”, and then press the SET button.  
Deleting Clips  
You can delete selected clips while checking their content.  
Press the RESET or MENU button.  
Notes  
5
With OK selected, press the SET button.  
• Clips cannot be deleted when the Write Inhibit tab of the  
disc is set to the recording disabled position, or when  
“REC INH” on page P1 of the function menu is set to  
“ON”.  
You return to the thumbnail screen, and a lock icon  
appears on the thumbnail of the selected clip to show  
that it is locked.  
Lock icon  
• Locked clips cannot be deleted.  
• When the target clip is referenced in a clip list, the clip  
list that references the clip will also be deleted.  
• If the deletion target clip is referenced by the current clip  
list, all of the referenced sub clips, and only those sub  
clips, are deleted simultaneously.  
1
With the SUB CLIP button off, press the  
THUMBNAIL button, turning it on.  
Locked clips cannot be deleted or set the thumbnail  
image (index picture) and so on. Unlock the clip if you  
want to perform any of these operations.  
The thumbnails of the clips on the disc appear.  
To lock clips with a shortcut operation  
After carrying out step 2 in the procedure, press the STOP  
button with the SHIFT button held down (shortcut  
operation).  
2
Select the clip to delete. (you can do this with the same  
operations as step 1 of “To select a thumbnail image  
You can lock clips without displaying the CLIP MENU.  
Clip to be deleted  
To unlock clips  
Carry out step 2 of “Locking Clips” to select a locked clip  
(one with the lock icon displayed on its thumbnail). Then  
do one of the following.  
• Carry out steps 3 and 4 of “Locking Clips”.  
• Press the STOP button with the SHIFT button held down  
(shortcut operation).  
To lock all clips  
1
2
Carry out steps 1 and 3 of “Locking Clips” to display  
the CLIP MENU.  
3
4
Press the MENU button.  
The CLIP menu appears.  
Use the V/MARK1 or the v/MARK2 button to select  
LOCK OR DELETE ALL CLIPS, and then press the  
b/OUT button.  
Use the V/MARK1 or the v/MARK2 button to select  
“DELETE CLIP”, and then press the SET button.  
A submenu screen appears.  
A deletion confirmation screen appears and then  
thumbnails of four frames (the first frame,  
intermediate frame 1, intermediate frame 2, and the  
last frame) in the target clip appear. At the same time,  
the clip name, title, date and time of creation, and  
duration appear.  
One of the following messages appears, depending on  
whether the target clip is referenced in a clip list.  
• When the target clip is not referenced in a clip list:  
“DELETE CLIP?”  
3
4
Select “LOCK ALL CLIPS”, and then press the SET  
button.  
A confirmation screen appears.  
With “OK” selected, press the SET button.  
All clips are locked.  
To unlock all clips  
Carry out the procedure in “To lock all clips”, selecting  
UNLOCK ALL CLIPS in step 2.  
• When the target clip is referenced in a clip list:  
“DELETE CLIP & CLIP LIST?” (The clip list that  
references the clip will also be deleted.)  
42  
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1
With the SUB CLIP button off, press the  
THUMBNAIL button, turning it on.  
Thumbnails of the clips on the disc appear.  
2
3
Press the MENU button.  
The CLIP menu appears.  
Use the V/MARK1 button to select “CLIP  
INFORMATION”, and then press the SET button.  
To cancel the deletion and return to the CLIP  
MENU  
A sub menu appears.  
Select “CANCEL”, and then press the SET button.  
Press the RESET or MENU button.  
5
Use the V/MARK1 button to select “OK”, and then  
press the SET button.  
The clip is deleted and you return to the thumbnail  
screen.  
To go to the clip deletion screen without  
displaying the CLIP MENU  
After step 2, press the RESET button with the SHIFT  
button held down (shortcut operation).  
The clip deletion screen appears directly, without  
displaying the CLIP MENU.  
4
Use the v/MARK2 button to select “SEQUENCE  
NUMBER”, and then press the SET button.  
As shown in the following figure, sequential numbers  
are assigned to thumbnails.  
To delete all clips  
1
2
Carry out steps 1 and 3 of “Deleting Clips” to display  
the CLIP MENU.  
Use the V/MARK1 or the v/MARK2 buttons to select  
“LOCK OR DELETE ALL CLIPS”, and then press  
the b/OUT button.  
A sub menu appears.  
3
4
Select “DELETE ALL CLIPS”, and then press the  
SET button.  
A deletion confirmation screen appears.  
To execute the deletion, use the V button to select  
“OK”, and then press the SET button.  
All clips are deleted.  
However, locked clips are not deleted.  
If all clips have been deleted, you return from the  
thumbnail screen to the original screen.  
Assigning Sequence Numbers to  
Thumbnails  
You can assign sequence numbers to displayed  
thumbnails.  
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Scene Selection  
4
Chapter  
Overview  
What is scene selection?  
Scene selection is a function which allows you to select  
material (clips) from the material recorded on a disc and  
perform cut editing. You can do this by operating on this  
unit only.  
• Scene selection is a convenient way to perform cut  
editing in the field and in other offline situations.  
• With the scene selection function, you create clip lists  
(edit data). The clips themselves are not changed, so you  
can repeat the operation as often as you like.  
• Clip lists created with the scene selection function can be  
played back on this unit.  
• The scene selection function makes it easy to carry out  
operations such as adding material in clip units, adding  
parts of clips, adding by chapter, reordering the playback  
order, modifying In and Out points, and deletion, all on  
this unit.  
• Clip lists (edit data) created with the scene selection  
function can be used on XPRI and other full-feature  
nonlinear editing systems.  
44  
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Flow of scene selection editing  
Disc  
EJECT  
Record material or insert disc containing recorded  
material into this unit  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
ACCESS  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
LOCAL  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLA  
Y
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
SHIFT  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
TOP  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
END  
STANDBY  
PDW-F330/F350  
PDW-70MD  
To edit a clip list on the disc  
Load a clip list (see page 59)  
Create and edit a clip list  
Sub  
Sub  
Sub  
Clip 1  
Clip 2 Clip 3 Clip 4  
• Including a sub clip in the current clip list (see page 49)  
• Reordering sub clips (see page 54)  
• Changing sub clip In and Out points (trimming) (see  
clip 1 clip 2 clip 3  
Select  
clips  
Clip list 1  
Recorded material  
• Deleting sub clips (see page 56)  
Clip 1  
Clip list 1  
Clip 2  
Clip 3  
Save the clip list to disc (see page 57)  
Disc  
Sub clip 1 Sub clip 2 Sub clip 3  
Play back clip list  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
F3  
ACCESS  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
LOCAL  
Play back the clip list (see page 40)  
MENU  
F4  
F5  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLA  
Y
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
SHIFT  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
TOP  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
END  
STANDBY  
PDW-70MD  
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Clips  
Sub clips (clips in clip lists)  
Material recorded with this unit is managed in units called  
“clips”. A clip contains the material between a recording  
start point and a recording end point.  
The specified clips (or parts of clips) in a clip list are called  
“sub clips”. Sub clips are virtual data specifying ranges in  
the original clips. Clip data in the original clips is not  
overwritten. The following figure shows the relation  
between clips and sub clips.  
Clips have numbers beginning with C, for example C0001.  
Recording  
start point of Recording end  
Clips on disc  
clip 2  
point of clip 2  
r
r
Clip 1  
(C0001)  
Clip 3  
(C0003)  
Clip 4  
(C0004)  
Clip 2 (C0002)  
Clip 1  
(C0001)  
Clip 2  
(C0002)  
Clip 3  
(C0003)  
Clip 4  
(C0004)  
Clip list (E0001)  
Sub clip 1  
Sub clip 2  
Sub clip 3  
Clip number  
In the above example, the whole of clip 2 has been added  
as sub clip 1, and the whole of clip 4 has been added as sub  
clip 2.  
Sub clip 3 is part of clip 3. Therefore, when clip list E0001  
is played back, clip 4 is played after clip 2, and then the  
part of clip 3 shown in gray color is played.  
Clip list editing (current clip list)  
To edit a clip lists, you need to load the clip from the disc  
into the internal unit memory.  
The clip list which is currently loaded into the unit memory  
is called the “current clip list”.  
The current clip list is always the target of sub clip creation  
and editing. Clip list playback also uses the current clip  
list.  
Instead of using clip numbers, you can manage clips by  
assigning clip titles.  
Clip lists  
After creating and editing a clip list, you need to save it to  
disc.  
Data called a “clip list” is created when you use the scene  
selection function to select desired clips from the clips  
stored on a disc.  
Clip lists have numbers beginning with E, for example  
E0001. Up to 99 clip lists can be saved on a disc.  
Unit memory  
Current clip list  
Can be edited (adding, deleting, and  
reordering sub clips)  
t Clip list playback  
and thumbnail  
display  
Clip list number  
SAVE Mm LOAD  
Disc  
C0001 (Clip 1)  
C0002 (Clip 2)  
E0001 (Clip list 1)  
E0002 (Clip list 2)  
C0003 (Clip 3)  
E0003 (Clip list 3)  
E0099 (Clip list 99)  
Clip list playback  
Clips and clip lists are saved together on a disc.  
Clips are played back according to clip list data.  
Thumbnails of sub clips in the selected clip list  
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CLIP AUTO TITLING  
Assigning Clip Titles  
When the setup menu item OPERATIONAL FUNCTION  
>CLIP TITLE >AUTO TITLE (see page 68) is set to  
“ENABLE”, titles are displayed instead of clip numbers  
for all clips recorded after the setting is made.  
PREFIX  
NUMERIC  
_ TITLE  
_ 00001  
Clip title  
SHIFT: ( )( )( )( )KEY  
INC/DEC: JOG DIAL  
TO MENU: MENU KEY  
PREFIX: Prefix (up to 5 alphanumeric characters and  
symbols)  
NUMERIC: Initial value of the number (00001 to  
99999)  
2
3
Enter the prefix and initial number.  
To select the item to set and the character to set (it  
flashes): Use the arrow buttons.  
To select a character to enter at the selected  
position: Turn the jog dial.  
To return the settings to the factory defaults: Press  
the RESET button.  
Titles are made up of a prefix of up to 10 characters and a  
5-digit number. The factory default prefix is “TITLE”, and  
the initial value of the number is 00001. Therefore, the title  
of the first clip created with the “ENABLE” setting is  
“TITLE00001”. The number is incremented for each  
subsequent clip.  
When you are finished entering the prefix and initial  
number, press the SET button.  
See “System Menu” (page 67) in Chapter 6 for more  
information about the setup menu.  
The message “NOW SAVING...” appears, the title is  
saved, and the menu disappears from the screen.  
To switch to clip number display  
Set CLIP TITLE >AUTO TITLE to “DISABLE”.  
Clip numbers are displayed for all clips recorded after the  
setting is made.  
To clear the menu from the screen without saving a  
title  
Press the MENU button twice.  
Note  
Notes  
If you return the initial number to the default value after  
creating several clips, and then continue recording, clips  
with the same titles may be created.  
• Titles are displayed instead of clip numbers for clips that  
have titles.  
• Use the CLIP STATUS screen of the disc menu (see  
page 74) if you want to check the clip number of a clip  
that has a title.  
Assigning User-Defined Clip and  
Clip List Names  
To assign clip titles  
You can set the clip title prefix and the initial clip title  
number to arbitrary values.  
For example, if you set the prefix to “SCENE” and the  
initial number to 00100, the next clip to be created will  
have the title “SCENE-00100”.  
The following standard format names are assigned  
automatically to clips and clip lists that are created or  
recorded by XDCAM devices.  
Clips: C0001 to C0300  
Clip lists: E0001E01 to E0099E01  
You can use the supplied PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software  
to assign user-defined names instead of the standard  
format names. You can assigned user-defined names  
instead of the standard format names. Assigning  
meaningful names to clips and clip lists can facilitate file  
management.  
1
Select OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >CLIP TITLE  
>TITLE in the setup menu, and then press the ,/  
OUT button.  
The CLIP AUTO TITLING screen appears.  
You can also use this unit's “AUTO TITLING” function to  
assign user-defined names to clips.  
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To assign clip names on this unit  
The title assigned to clip becomes its clip name (file  
name).  
Note  
When the first letter of the title setting on the CLIP  
TITLE menu is a space or period (.), the clip name is  
the title string minus the first letter.  
To enable clip and clip list renaming by FAM  
Carry out step 2 of “To assign clip names on this unit”.  
It is now possible to write, transfer, and rename clips and  
clip lists with user-defined names over file access mode  
(FAM) connections (see page 62).  
To change clip names, execute the “Rename” command  
for a file in the Clip folder with the extension “.MXF”.  
The extension “.MXF” cannot be changed.  
C0001.MXF  
TITLE00001  
When sub item “AUTO NAMING” is set to “C****”  
TITLE00001.MXF  
Fuji.MXF  
Clip renaming by FAM is enabled  
TITLE00001  
To change clip list names, execute the “Rename”  
command for a file in the Edit folder with the extension “.  
SMI”.  
When sub item “AUTO NAMING” is set to “title”  
1
2
Set OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >CLIP TITLE  
>AUTO TITLE in the setup menu to “ENABLE” (see  
The extension “. SMI” cannot be changed.  
Set OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >FILE NAMING  
>AUTO NAMING to “free”.  
Sakura.SMI  
You are now able to use clips and clip lists with user-  
defined names.  
Clip list renaming by FAM is enabled  
To check clip names  
3
Set OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >FILE NAMING  
>AUTO NAMING to “title”.  
Press the THUMBNAIL button to display the thumbnail  
screen, and select the clip whose name you want to check.  
The name of the selected clip appears at the upper left of  
the screen.  
However, when a title has been assigned to a clip, display  
of the title takes priority. Titles are displayed enclosed in  
double quotation marks (“ ”).  
C****: Assign standard format clip names  
automatically.  
title: Assign clip titles as clip names.  
SETUP MENU  
OPERATIONAL FUNCTION  
FILE NAMING  
more information about the thumbnail screen.  
.
AUTO NAMING title  
* C****  
title  
Note  
Clip names, clip list names, and titles are converted as  
follows for display in the thumbnail screen and the CLIP  
menu.  
• If the names are longer than 15 characters, only the first  
9 characters and the last 5 characters are displayed.  
Other characters are converted into s.  
The same name will now be given to newly recorded  
clips.  
• Lowercase characters are converted into uppercase.  
• Kanji and other multibyte characters, and some  
alphabetic symbols, are converted into s characters.  
48  
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Sequences of multiple s characters is converted into  
single s characters.  
The following alphabetic symbols can be displayed.  
: . ? ! # * / ( ) + - & @ = < > % " ; _  
Creating Clip Lists  
Select the desired clip, to include it in the current clip list  
as a sub clip.  
There are two ways to select clips.  
Display example  
JumpingDolphin_No103  
r
• Select from the thumbnail screen.  
JUMPINGDOsNO103  
You can select the desired clips from the thumbnail  
screen. You can also select continuous clips at a time.  
In addition, you can use the Expand function to specify  
a range to add in a clip or to load and add a clip with a  
chapter registered.  
• Select while playing back and searching.  
You can select the scene to use while viewing the video  
(quick scene selection).  
Before starting  
Insert a disc containing recorded clips into the unit.  
Including Clips Selected in the  
Thumbnail Screen in the Clip List  
SUB CLIP button  
CHAPTER button  
EXPAND button  
THUMBNAIL button  
MENU button  
SET button  
RESET button  
EJECT  
F1  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
ACCESS  
VAR  
MARK1  
NETWORK  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
LOCAL  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
SHIFT button  
PREV button  
PLAY button  
NEXT button  
STOP button  
Jog dial  
Arrow buttons  
(M/MARK1, m/  
MARK2, </IN  
button, ,/OUT  
button)  
Proceed as follows.  
1
With the SUB CLIP button unlit, press the  
THUMBNAIL button, lighting it.  
Thumbnails of the clips on the disc appear.  
(In the following description, this is referred to as the  
“thumbnail screen”. )  
49  
Creating Clip Lists  
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+NAME: Name of the clip list, or a user-defined name  
You can use the supplied PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing  
Software to assign titles to clip lists.  
4
5
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select a  
clip list number such as E0001, and then press the SET  
button.  
This returns to the thumbnail screen.  
Press the SUB CLIP button.  
2
Press the MENU button.  
The clip list window appears.  
If you selected NEW FILE in step 4, the display shows  
the state with no clips loaded as shown below.  
Select NEW FILE to create a new clip list.  
The CLIP menu appears (see page 58).  
(If no clip list is loaded in the current clip list, a screen  
as shown in step 3 appears.)  
6
7
Press the MENU button.  
The CLIP menu appears.  
3
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
LOAD CLIP LIST, and then press the SET button.  
A clip list selection screen appears.  
For an already created clip list, the details including  
the creation date appear, and for an empty clip list,  
“NEW FILEappears.  
Display item types  
Press the ,/OUT button to switch the display.  
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
“ADD”, and then press the SET button.  
The scene selection window appears.  
(Subsequently, this entire screen is called the “scene  
selection window”.)  
To select the type of clip list information to display  
Press the b/OUT button.  
Each press of the button switches the display in the  
order Date >Title >Name.  
The following informantion is displayed for display  
item types:  
+DATE: Date and time when the clip list was created  
or last modified  
+TITLE: Title assigned to the clip list  
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Creating Clip Lists  
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8
Use the arrow buttons or jog dial to select the desired  
clip.  
Total duration of sub clips in the current clip list  
You can also select clips with the following  
operations.  
Press the PREV or NEXT button: Moves to the  
previous or next clip.  
Press the PREV or NEXT button with the SHIFT  
button held down: Moves to the first or last clip.  
Press the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button with the  
SHIFT button held down: Switches to the  
previous or next page. Does not switch when  
there is only one page.  
Press the </IN button or ,/OUT button with the  
SHIFT button held down: Selects continuous  
multiple clips.  
Cursor (shows insertion  
position of next sub clip)  
Thumbnails of the sub clips already added to the current clip list  
To display the total duration of the current clip list  
after the addition of the selected clips  
When you press the SHIFT button, the total duration  
of the selected clips is displayed, along with the total  
duration of the clip list after the addition of the selected  
clips. This allows you to check the new total duration  
before making the addition.  
12Repeat steps 8 to 11 until you have added all of the  
desired clips to the current clip list.  
You can add the same clip as a sub clip any number of  
times.  
13When you have finished selecting all the clips you  
want, press the SET button without pressing the  
SHIFT button.  
9
Press the SET button.  
An I-shaped cursor appears in the lower part of the  
scene selection window.  
Press the RESET button to return to the state of step 8.  
This closes the scene selection window, and the screen  
returns to the CLIP menu.  
To close the CLIP menu  
Press the RESET button.  
10Use the arrow buttons or jog dial to move the cursor to  
the desired position.  
14Save the current clip list to disc.  
You can also move the cursor with the following  
operations.  
Press the PREV or NEXT button: Moves the cursor  
to the previous or next clip.  
Press the PREV or NEXT button with the SHIFT  
button held down: Moves the cursor to the first  
or last clip.  
Press M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button with the  
SHIFT button held down: Switches to the  
previous or next page.  
11With the SHIFT button held down, press the SET  
button.  
All the clips selected in step 8 are added to the current  
clip list as sub clips and the scene selection window  
shows thumbnails of registered sub clips.  
At the same time, the cursor disappears and you can  
select a new clip.  
Notes  
• Unless the current clip list has been saved to disc, its  
contents will be lost when the unit is powered off or the  
disc is ejected. After creating a clip list, be sure to save it.  
An asterisk (*) appears after the date and time of creation  
when a clip list has not been saved to disc.  
51  
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Note  
Even if you select several thumbnails, they are added to the  
clip list as one continuous sub clip.  
To add sub clips using the chapter  
function  
The chapter function allows a thumbnail to be displayed  
for each shot mark recorded within a clip.  
Asterisk appears when clip list has not been saved to disc.  
• Even when a clip whose thumbnail is not the first frame  
is added to a clip list, the thumbnail displayed in the clip  
list is always the first frame as a thumbnail.  
1
Carry out step 8 of the procedure in “Including Clips  
(page 49). An “S” mark appears in the upper right of  
thumbnails where short marks have been set. Select  
one of these thumbnails and press the CHAPTER  
button.  
To add sub clips using the expand function  
You can include a part of a sub clip in the current clip list  
by dividing the content of the sub clip into parts and  
displaying thumbnails of the parts.  
This displays thumbnails of chapters of the specified  
clip in the upper portion of the scene selection  
window.  
Proceed as follows.  
1
After carrying out step 8 of the procedure in  
the Clip List” (page 49), press the EXPAND (F5)  
button.  
Thumbnails of the target clip divided into eight equal  
parts appear in the upper portion of the scene selection  
window.  
2
3
Carry out steps 8 to 12 of the procedure in “Including  
List” (page 49) to include thumbnails of the scenes  
you want to include in the clip list.  
To vary the expansion ratio  
Each time you press the EXPAND button changes the  
ratio through the sequence ×8 t ×64 t ×512.  
To return to the previous setting, hold down the SHIFT  
button and press the EXPAND button.  
The section from the selected thumbnail to the next  
thumbnail is included as a sub clip.  
Save the current clip list to disc.  
To cancel the expand display  
Press the RESET button.  
You return to the scene selection window.  
When you select several chapter thumbnails, they are  
added to the clip list as a single sub clip.  
2
3
Carry out steps 8 to 12 of the procedure in “Including  
List” (page 49) to include thumbnails of the portions  
you want to include in the clip list.  
Quick Scene Selection (Adding Sub  
Clips During Recording, Playback,  
or Search)  
The section from the selected thumbnail to the next  
thumbnail is included as a sub clip.  
Save the current clip list to disc.  
Before starting, load the clip list to which you want to add  
a sub clip into the current clip list (see page 59).  
52  
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You can use a trimming operation (see page 55) to change  
In and Out points set by the quick scene selection function.  
To reset an In point or Out point  
With the </IN button or ,/OUT button held down,  
press the RESET button.  
4
Holding down the SHIFT button, press the SET  
button.  
2,3,4 2,3  
EJECT  
The section between the In point and Out point is  
added to the end of the current clip list as a sub clip.  
F1  
0
0
TCG  
EXT  
-12  
-20  
-12  
-20  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
-30  
-40  
-60  
-30  
-40  
-60  
ACCESS  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
1
2
3
4
VAR  
MARK1  
+
NETWORK  
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
MPEG HD  
SP  
VITC  
1080 60I  
COOO1  
LOCAL  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
P2  
00:00.00:00  
PAGE DISPLAY  
When you set In and Out points stretching across  
several clips  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
One sub clip is created for each of the clips.  
Clips recorded on the disc  
4
1
1
Clip 1  
Clip 2  
Clip 3  
1
With the SUB CLIP button off, and the clip displayed  
in full-screen mode, play back the clip or conduct a  
search to find the point that you want to set as the In  
point.  
In point  
Out point  
To display the desired clip in full-screen mode  
If the thumbnail screen is displayed, use the arrow  
buttons or jog dial to select the clip to display in full-  
screen mode, and then press the SET button.  
Sub clip 1  
Sub clip 2  
Sub clip 3  
5
6
Repeat steps 1 to 4 until you have added all of the clips  
you want to the current clip list.  
To search  
Use the jog and shuttle dials.  
Save the current clip list to disc.  
2
3
At the point you want to set as the In point, hold down  
the </IN button and press the SET button.  
An In point is set, and the IN indicator lights.  
If the unit is set up to superimpose character  
information on the display (see page 29), the In point  
timecode appears.  
In the same way, search for the point you want to set  
as the Out point, and then hold down the ,/OUT  
button and press the SET button.  
An Out point is set, and the OUT indicator lights.  
If the unit is set up to superimpose character  
information on the display (see page 29), the Out point  
timecode appears.  
To check the In point or Out point  
The timecode of the In or Out point that you have set  
appears when you press the </IN button or the ,/  
OUT button. An image of the In point is cued up if you  
hold down the </IN button and press the PREV  
button or NEXT button. An image of the Out point is  
cued up if you hold down the ,/OUT button and  
press the PREV button or NEXT button.  
To check the duration  
Hold down the </IN button and the ,/OUT button  
at the same time.  
The duration appears on the screen.  
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You can also select clips with the following  
operations.  
Press the PREV or NEXT button: Moves to the  
previous or next clip.  
Editing Clip Lists  
Press the PREV or NEXT button with the SHIFT  
button held down: Moves to the first or last clip.  
Press M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button with the  
SHIFT button held down: Switches to the  
previous or next page. Does not switch when  
there is only one page.  
Press an </IN button or ,/OUT button with the  
SHIFT button held down: Selects continuous  
multiple clips.  
You can select items from CLIP menus, and perform  
simple editing operations on clip lists and on sub clips  
registered in clip lists.  
Basic Operations  
1 3,5 2,4  
Note  
EJECT  
F1  
0
0
TCG  
EXT  
-12  
-20  
-12  
-20  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
If you selected “TRIM”, you can select only one sub  
clip.  
-30  
-40  
-60  
-30  
-40  
-60  
ACCESS  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
1
2
3
4
VAR  
MARK1  
+
NETWORK  
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
MPEG HD  
SP  
VITC  
1080 60I  
COOO1  
LOCAL  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
P2  
00:00.00:00  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
5
6
Press the SET button.  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
This allows you to carry out the editing operation  
selected from the CLIP menu for the selected sub clip.  
4
4
Carry out the selected editing operation.  
1
2
In the clip list screen, hold down the MENU button.  
For details, see the following pages.  
The CLIP menu appears.  
Reordering sub clips: Page 54  
Trimming sub clips: Page 55  
Deleting sub clips: Page 56  
Setting the timecode: Page 56  
7
Save the edited current clip list to disc.  
Reordering Sub Clips  
Press the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
the edit item you want.  
Proceed as follows.  
You can carry out the following edit operations.  
1
Carry out steps 1 to 5 of the procedure in “Basic  
Operations” (see page 54) (select “MOVE” in step 2).  
CLIP menu Item  
MOVE  
Description  
Reorder sub clips.  
The I-shaped cursor indicating the move destination  
appears in the clip list window.  
TRIM  
Change the In and Out points of  
sub clips.  
2
Use the arrow buttons or jog dial to move the I-shaped  
cursor to the desired position.  
DELETE  
Delete unnecessary sub clips.  
TC PRESET  
Set the first timecode of the  
current clip list to any value.  
You can also move the cursor with the following  
operations.  
Press the PREV or NEXT button: Moves the cursor  
to the previous or next sub clip.  
Press the PREV or NEXT button with the SHIFT  
button held down: Moves the cursor to the first  
or last sub clip.  
3
4
Press the SET button.  
A screen appears to allow you to select the target sub  
clip of the operation. (A timecode setting screen  
appears if you have selected TC PRESET.)  
Use the arrow buttons or jog dial to select the desired  
sub clip.  
Press M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button with the  
SHIFT button held down: Switches to the  
54  
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previous or next page. Does not switch when  
there is only one page.  
Indicates that 2nd sub clip will be moved to position of 7th sub clip.  
To cancel the trim and return to the previous  
screen  
Press the m/MARK2 button to display “OK” (the  
background color changes into yellow), and press the  
RESET button.  
I-shaped cursor showing position to  
which selected sub clip will be moved.  
2
3
Carry out playback and search to find the new location  
of the In point or Out point of the selected sub clip.  
To return to the clip list window without moving  
any sub clip  
Press the RESET button.  
At the scene where you want to set a new In or Out  
point, hold down the </IN button (to change the In  
point) or the ,/OUT button (to change the Out point)  
and press the SET button.  
3
Press the SET button.  
The CLIP MENU appears after the sub clip order  
changes.  
If you press the SHIFT + SET buttons instead of the  
SET button, you return to the state after step 4 in  
“Basic Operations”, allowing you to move another sub  
clip.  
Depending on the button that you pressed, a new In or  
Out point is set.  
Note  
The IN and OUT indicators flash if you set an Out  
point with timecode smaller than the In point. If this  
occurs, set the correct timecode.  
To change both the In and Out points  
Carry out steps 2 and 3 for both the In and Out points.  
To reset the In or Out point  
Hold down the </IN button or ,/OUT button, and  
press the RESET button. The In or Out point is  
restored to the value it had before the sub clip trim  
screen opened.  
4
Save the current clip list to disc.  
To cue up the In or Out point  
The In point is cued up when you hold down the </  
IN button and press the PREV button or the NEXT  
button.  
The Out point is cued up when you hold down the ,/  
OUT button and press the PREV button or the NEXT  
button.  
Modifying the In and Out Points of  
Sub Clips (Trimming)  
Proceed as follows.  
4
5
Once you have set the new In point or Out point, press  
the m/MARK2 button to select “OK”.  
1
Carry out steps 1 to 5 of the procedure in “Basic  
Operations” (see page 54) (select TRIM in step 2).  
The background color of the OK button changes to  
yellow.  
The first frame (In point frame) of the selected sub clip  
appears. In this state, you can carry out playback and  
search all clips on the disc.  
Press the SET button.  
55  
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The CLIP MENU appears after the trim is executed.  
If you press the SHIFT + SET buttons instead of the  
SET button, you return to the state after step 4 in  
“Basic Operations”, allowing you execute another  
trim.  
By default, the start timecode (LTC) for the current clip list  
is set to “00:00:00:00”.  
To set this to a different value, proceed as follows.  
1
Carry out steps 1 to 4 of the procedure in “Basic  
Operations” (see page 54) (select TC PRESET in step  
6
Save the current clip list to disc.  
2).  
The timecode setting screen appears.  
Deleting Sub Clips  
Proceed as follows.  
1
Carry out steps 1 to 5 of the procedure in “Basic  
Operations” (see page 54) (select DELETE in step 2).  
To display the total duration of the current clip list  
after the addition of the selected clips  
When you press the SHIFT button, the total duration  
of the selected clips is displayed, along with the total  
duration of the clip list after the deletion of the selected  
clips. This allows you to check the new total duration  
before making the deletion.  
The timecode shown in this screen is the current initial  
timecode of the current clip list. If a clip list has been  
loaded from disc, and timecode has already been set  
for that clip list, then that value is displayed.  
2
3
Use the </IN and ,/OUT buttons to select the digit  
(HOUR, MIN, SEC or FRAME) you want to set.  
2
3
Press the SET button.  
Use the M/MARK1 and m/MARK2 buttons or jog dial  
to display the value you want to set.  
The deletion confirmation screen appears.  
To cancel the timecode setting  
Press the RESET button.  
To return to the clip list window without deleting  
any sub clip  
Press the RESET button.  
4
5
When you have finished setting all the digits you want,  
press the SET button.  
Use the </IN or ,/OUT button to select “OK”, and  
then press the SET button.  
The starting timecode for the current clip list is set to  
the specified LTC value. The count starts from that  
value when playback starts.  
The CLIP MENU appears after the deletion is  
executed.  
If you press the SHIFT + SET buttons instead of the  
SET button, you return to the state after step 4 in  
“Basic Operations”, allowing you to execute another  
deletion.  
Save the current clip list to disc.  
4
Save the current clip list to disc.  
The drop-frame or non-drop-frame setting of the current  
clip list reflects the setting of the unit at the time when one  
of the following operations is performed.  
• Adding the first sub clip  
• Setting the start timecode  
Setting the Start Timecode for the  
Current Clip List  
Previewing the Edited Clip List  
Continuous timecode is used in clip lists, regardless of the  
timecode of the parent clips of sub clips. Therefore, you  
can set the start timecode for each clip list.  
With the SUB CLIP button lit, press the PLAY button.  
If you are in the thumbnail screen (the THUMBNAIL  
button is lit), playback starts from the beginning of the  
selected sub clip.  
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However, if you press the SUB CLIP button to turn it off,  
and then press it again to light it, the playback start position  
is reset to the start of the clip list.  
With the SUB CLIP button lit, press the PLAY button.  
You can repeat playback of the current clip list by setting  
SET UP >OPERATIONAL FUNCTION >REPEAT  
MODE to ON.  
Saving the Current Clip  
List to Disc  
Notes  
• Edited clip list data is not saved unless you carry out this  
operation. If you are going to use the created or edited  
clip list data later on, be sure to save it to disc.  
• If the Write Inhibit tab on the disc is set to the recording  
disabled position, you cannot save the current clip list to  
the disc.  
• It may not be possible to record because of some other  
reason, for example not enough free capacity on the disc.  
2 2,3  
EJECT  
F1  
0
0
TCG  
EXT  
-12  
-20  
-12  
-20  
F2  
F3  
F4  
F5  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
-30  
-40  
-60  
-30  
-40  
-60  
ACCESS  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
1
2
3
4
VAR  
MARK1  
+
NETWORK  
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
MENU  
CHAPTER  
EXPAND  
MPEG HD  
SP  
VITC  
1080 60I  
COOO1  
LOCAL  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
IN  
OUT  
SUB  
CLIP  
THUMB  
NAIL  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
SET RESET  
JOG  
P2  
00:00.00:00  
PAGE DISPLAY  
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
KEY INHI  
CH  
1
CH  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
END  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
STANDBY  
Proceed as follows.  
1
2
Display the CLIP menu.  
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to move the  
cursor to “SAVE CLIP LIST”, and then press the SET  
button.  
A list of clip lists appears. The date of creation or the  
title is displayed for each clip list.  
“NEW FILE” is displayed for clip lists without any  
saved data.  
To switch between title display and date of creation  
display  
Press the ,/OUT button.  
3
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button or jog dial to  
select the desired clip list, and then press the ,/OUT  
button.  
The current clip list is saved to disc.  
To cancel the save  
Press the MENU button.  
57  
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To assign a title to a clip list  
Use the supplied PDZ-1 proxy browsing.  
Managing Clip Lists  
For details, see the PDZ-1 online help.  
After you create or edit a clip list, you can use the CLIP  
menu to save it to disc, load it from disc into unit memory,  
and delete it from the disc.  
Displaying the CLIP menu  
Hold down the SHIFT button and press the SUB CLIP  
button.  
In the thumbnail list screen and the clip list screen, you can  
display the CLIP menu by pressing the MENU button.  
The CLIP menu items you can display and select vary with  
the operating state of the unit (see the following table).  
Item  
Operation (reference page)  
CLIP INFORMATION  
Select the information displayed  
beneath thumbnails (see page  
LOAD CLIP LIST  
Load a clip list from the disc into  
the current clip list (see page  
SAVE CLIP LIST  
Save the current clip list to disc  
DELETE CLIP LIST  
SORT CLIP LISTS BY  
Delete a clip list from the disc  
You can sort the clip lists by  
name or date and time of  
creation (see page 59).  
a)  
Change the thumbnail image  
(index picture) of a clip (see  
SET INDEX PICTURE  
a)  
Add sub clips to the current clip  
ADD  
b)  
Reorder sub clips (see page 54)  
MOVE  
b)  
Change the In point or Out point  
of a sub clip (see page 55)  
TRIM  
b)  
Delete unnecessary sub clips  
DELETE  
b)  
Change the start timecode for  
the current clip list to a desired  
TC PRESET  
DELETE CLIP  
Delete a clip  
LOCK/UNLOCK CLIP  
Lock or unlock a clip  
LOCK OR DELETE ALL Lock or delete all clips  
CLIPS  
DELETE SHOT MARK  
Delete a shot mark  
a) Displayed only in operating thumbnail list screen  
b) Displayed only in operating the clip list screen  
To clear the CLIP menu from the screen  
Press the MENU button (or hold down the SHIFT button  
and press the SUB CLIP button).  
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3
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select the  
desired clip list, and then press the SET button.  
Note  
The CLIP menu can handle up to 99 clip lists.  
The selected clip list is loaded into the unit as the  
current clip list.  
To display thumbnails of the loaded current clip  
list  
Press the THUMBNAIL button and SUB CLIP button,  
turning them on.  
Changing Displayed Items of  
Information on Sub Clips  
You can change information displayed in the lower portion  
of each thumbnail in the clip list window.  
Proceed as follows.  
If an unsaved clip list exists in current clip list  
memory  
A warning message like the following appears.  
“CLIP LIST IS NOT SAVED. OVERWRITE CLIP  
LIST?”  
Press the </IN button or ,/OUT button to select “OK”  
(overwrite) or “CANCEL” (do not overwrite), and then  
press the SET button.  
1
2
Display the CLIP menu.  
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
“CLIP INFORMATION”, and then press the SET  
button.  
A screen appears allowing you to select information  
items to display.  
Deleting Clip Lists From a Disc  
Proceed as follows.  
3
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select the  
items you want to display, and then press the SET  
button.  
1
2
Display the CLIP menu.  
DATE: Date and time of creation  
TIME CODE: Timecode of the start of the sub clip  
DURATION: Playback time  
SEQUENCE NUMBER: Thumbnail sequence  
number  
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
“DELETE CLIP LIST”, and then press the SET  
button.  
A list of clip lists appears (see page 50).  
(page 43) for more information about sequence  
thumbnail numbers.  
3
4
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select a  
clip list to delete, and then press the SET button.  
When the clip list window is displayed, the  
information of the selected items appears in the lower  
portion of each thumbnail.  
A deletion confirmation screen appears.  
Press the </IN button or the ,/OUT button to select  
OK, and then press the SET button.  
Loading a Clip List From a Disc Into  
the Current Clip List  
To cancel the clip list deletion  
Press the RESET button.  
The selected clip list is deleted from the disc.  
Before you can play back or edit a clip list, you need to  
load it from the disc into the current clip list.  
Proceed as follows.  
To continue deleting other clip lists  
After selecting “OK”, press the SET button while holding  
down the SHIFT button. The selected clip list is deleted,  
and you return to step 3 and can continue deleting clip lists.  
1
2
Display the CLIP menu.  
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
“LOAD CLIP LIST”, and then the press the SET  
button.  
Sorting Clip Lists  
Proceed as follows to sort the list of existing clip lists by  
clip list name or by date of creation.  
A list of clip lists appears (see page 50).  
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1
2
Display the CLIP menu.  
BY DATE: Indicates sorting by date  
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
“SORT CLIP LISTS BY...”, and then press the SET  
button.  
A screen like the one shown below appears.  
You can jump to the first clip or last clip by pressing the  
PREV or NEXT button with the SHIFT button held down.  
3
4
Use the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select the  
type of sorting.  
NAME: Sort in ascending order by clip list name.  
DATE: Sort by date of creation, with the newest clip  
list first.  
Press the </IN button.  
Sorting starts on LOAD CLIP LIST screen and so on.  
Unused clip lists are excluded from the sort.  
If you selected “NAME”:  
BY NAME: Indicates sorting by name  
If you selected “DATE”:  
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Using the PDZ-1 Proxy  
Browsing Software  
When a computer with the PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing  
Software installed is connected to this unit, you can  
transfer the proxy AV data and metadata files recorded on  
a disc to the computer. On the computer side, PDZ-1  
enables you to browse the proxy AV data, add or modify  
metadata (titles, comments, essence marks, etc.), or create  
a clip list.  
The modified metadata and the created clip list can then be  
written back to the disc loaded in this unit.  
System requirements to use the PDZ-1  
The following are required to use PDZ-1.  
• Computer: PC with Intel Pentium III CPU, at least  
1 GHz (installed memory: at least 512 MB)  
• Operating system: Microsoft Windows 2000 Service  
Pack 4 or higher, or Microsoft Windows XP  
Professional Service Pack 1 or higher  
• Web browser: Internet Explorer 6.0 Service Pack 1 or  
higher  
• DirectX: DirectX 8.1b or higher  
To install PDZ-1  
Insert the supplied CD-ROM (PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing  
Software) in the CD-ROM drive of the computer and  
execute the Setup.exe file, then follow the installation  
instructions.  
For details, refer to the ReadMe file on the CD-ROM.  
Note  
Make sure that the work folder to store the material  
transferred from this unit is on a hard disk drive with  
adequate free space. The amount of proxy AV data  
transferred is up to 2.8 GB per disc (when recording in the  
LP format).  
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File Operations  
5
Chapter  
Overview  
File Operations in File  
Access Mode  
A remote computer can be connected to this unit and used  
to operate on recorded data which has been saved in data  
files, such as video and audio data files.  
File access mode operating environment  
Use FAM (file access mode) for the computer connection.  
Operating system requirements for file operations by file  
access mode are as follows.  
Computer operating system: Microsoft Windows  
2000 Service Pack 4 or higher, or Microsoft  
Windows XP  
Preparations  
Do the following on the remote computer and this unit.  
• Install the FAM driver on the remote computer (see the  
next item).  
• In the setup menu, set INTERFACE SELECT >i.LINK  
MODE to “FAM (PC REMOTE)” (see page 71).  
To install the FAM driver  
Insert the supplied CD-ROM (PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing  
Software) in the CD-ROM drive of the computer and  
execute the Setup.exe file, then follow the installation  
instructions.  
For details, refer to the ReadMe file contained on the CD-  
ROM disc.  
Making FAM Connections  
Proceed as follows.  
1
If there is a disc loaded in this unit, put the unit into the  
following state.  
• Recording, playback, search and other disc  
operations: Stopped  
• THUMBNAIL button (see page 12): Off  
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• Disc access by DELETE LAST CLIP, DELETE  
ALL CLIPS, QUICK FORMAT in the DISC menu,  
and so on: Stopped  
• MENU button: OFF  
• Unsaved current clip list: Save or clear  
Notes  
• If you power this unit off during an FAM  
connection, the data transferred thus far is discarded.  
• All file operations are not possible for some types of  
files.  
2
Connect the S400 connector on this unit to the  
i.LINK (IEEE1394) connector on the remote  
computer, using an i.LINK cable.  
To eject discs from a remote computer  
Right click the icon representing this unit in Explorer, and  
select “Eject” from the menu which appears.  
File data  
To exit file operations  
Proceed as follows.  
Transfer  
of files  
Disc recorder (this unit)  
Laptop computer, etc.  
Note  
F1  
F2  
F3  
ACCESS  
VCR  
NETWORK  
LOCAL  
MARK1  
MENU  
CLIP  
F4  
F5  
IN  
OUT  
REMOTE  
LEVEL  
THUMB  
NAIL  
SET RESET  
EDIT  
JOG  
P
AGE DISPLA  
Y
CLIP  
ESSENCE  
MARK  
Do not disconnect the cable before performing steps 1 to 3.  
MENU  
MARK2  
PREV  
PLAY  
NEXT  
STOP  
REC  
SHUTTLE  
CH-1  
2
CH  
3
CH  
4
CH  
PHONES  
VARIABLE  
REC  
PRESET  
PB  
SHIFT  
TOP  
F
REV  
F
FWD  
END  
1
Do one of the following on the  
displayed in the remote computer’s taskbar.  
or  
icon  
i.LINK cable (not supplied)  
• Double click.  
Windows recognizes this unit as a removable disc, and  
displays one of the following icons on the remote  
computer’s task bar:  
• Right click, and select one of the following  
commands from the menu which appears.  
Windows 2000: Unplug or eject hardware  
Windows XP: Safely Remove Hardware  
• Windows 2000:  
• Windows XP:  
The “Unplug or Eject Hardware” dialog box  
(Windows 2000) or the “Safety Remove Hardware”  
dialog box (Windows XP) appears.  
The remote computer is now able to perform file  
operations when a disc is inserted into this unit.  
2
3
Select “Sony XDCAM PDW-70MD IEEE 1394 SBP2  
Device” and click “Stop”.  
Operation limitations during FAM connections  
• With the exception of the EJECT button, recording  
buttons and playback control buttons are disabled.  
• This unit cannot be controlled from any device  
connected to an external device connector.  
• There is no signal output from this unit, and the message  
“PC REMOTE!” appears in the display of this unit and  
on the external monitor.  
The “Stop a Hardware device” dialog appears.  
Select “Sony XDCAM PDW-70MD IEEE 1394 SBP2  
Device” and click “OK”.  
In Windows 2000, a confirmation message appears.  
In Windows XP, “Sony XDCAM PDW-70MD IEEE  
1394 SBP2 Device” is deleted from the list of  
“hardware devices”.  
Operating on Files  
This unit can now resume normal operations. (The  
limitations described in “Operation limitations during  
Proceed as follows.  
1
Start Explorer.  
4
Disconnect the i.LINK cable as required.  
Check that a drive letter has been assigned to this unit.  
(The drive letter will differ depending on the number  
of other peripherals connected to the remote  
computer.)  
To make a reconnection  
To reconnect after exiting file operations, do one of the  
following, depending on whether an i.LINK cable is  
connected.  
i.LINK cable is not connected: Connect this unit and a  
remote computer with an i.LINK cable.  
2
Use Explorer to perform file operations on the disc  
loaded in this unit.  
You can operate in the same way that you operate on  
local drives and files on network computers.  
63  
File Operations in File Access Mode  
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i.LINK cable is connected: Disconnect the i.LINK cable  
from either this unit or the remote computer, wait for  
at least 10 seconds, and then reconnect the  
disconnected cable.  
The unit is powered off and an i.LINK cable is  
connected: Power the unit on.  
Recording Continuous  
Timecode Over FAM  
Connections  
To disable FAM connections  
For clips created over a FAM connection, you can record  
so that the timecode is continuous with the timecode of the  
last frame of the last clip recorded on the disc.  
Execute one of the procedures described in the previous  
connection between this unit and the remote computer. To  
disable FAM connections, in the setup menu, set  
INTERFACE SELECT >i.LINK MODE to “AV/C” (see  
To record continuous timecode  
Before you start recording, set TCG on page P2 of the  
function menu to “INT” and set TC MODE to “REGEN”.  
Then write clip files to this unit from a connected computer  
or other device.  
64  
Recording Continuous Timecode Over FAM Connections  
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Menus  
6
Chapter  
To clear the function menu from the screen  
Press the DISPLAY button. The size of the monitor video  
display size increases.  
Function Menu  
The function menu provides access to frequently used  
settings, such as input video signal selection and timecode  
settings.  
Menu settings are stored in nonvolatile memory and are  
preserved even after the unit is powered off.  
To change the setting of a function menu  
item  
Use the F1 to F5 buttons.  
Press the button to the right of each setting item to change  
the value of the item. Keep pressing the button until the  
value you want appears.  
Function Menu Operations  
Function Menu Settings  
The function menu appears on the LCD panel of this unit.  
The following figure shows the buttons used in function  
menu operations.  
The following tables list the setting items on each page and  
describe their setting values.  
Monitor video  
section  
HOME page  
F1  
0
0
TCG  
EXT  
-12  
-20  
-12  
-20  
F2  
F3  
F4  
TC MODE  
PRESET  
-30  
-40  
-60  
-30  
-40  
-60  
Setting item  
Description  
RUN MODE  
REC RUN  
F1 to F5 buttons  
1
2
3
4
+
4CH 16 BIT  
3
4
T C / V I T C  
V I T C  
F1: V INPUT (video input) Selects the video input signal.  
HDSDI: HDSDI signal  
MPEG HD  
SP  
VITC  
1080 60I  
COOO1  
REM:077M  
DF/NDF  
NDF  
F5  
P2  
00:00.00:00  
SG: Test signal from the  
PAGE DISPLAY  
internal signal generator  
DISPLAY button  
PAGE button  
Display  
F2: A1 INPUT (audio input Selects the audio input signals  
1)  
F4: A3 INPUT (audio input and 3.  
3)  
assigned to audio channels 1  
Function Menu  
HDSDI: Audio signal  
multiplexed into HDSDI  
1)  
signal  
To display the function menu  
The function menu is made up of the HOME page and  
pages P1 and P2.  
If the function menu is not already visible, press the PAGE  
button to display it. The most recently accessed function  
menu page appears.  
The size of the monitor video section changes to the  
smallest size when the function menu appears.  
ANALOG1: Analog 1 audio  
signal  
AES/EBU: Signals input to  
DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/  
EBU) INPUT 1/2 and 3/4  
connectors  
SG: Test signal from the  
internal signal generator  
To display a different page  
Each press of the PAGE button displays the next function  
menu page in the order HOME t P1 t P2 t HOME…  
65  
Function Menu  
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Setting item  
F3: A2 INPUT (audio input Selects the audio input signals  
2) assigned to audio channels 2  
F5: A4 INPUT (audio input and 4.  
4) HDSDI: Audio signal  
Description  
Setting item  
Description  
F5: CHAR SEL (Character Turns the display of character  
information display)  
information on the monitor  
video section of the LCD panel  
on and off.  
ON: Character information on  
OFF: Character information off  
LCD: Character information on  
for the LCD panel  
Even when ON is selected, you  
can forcibly turn off the  
superimposition of character  
information in HD output by  
setting the SETUP MENU  
>DISPLAY CONTROL >HD  
CHARA item.  
multiplexed into HDSDI  
1)  
signal  
ANALOG2: Analog 2 audio  
signal  
AES/EBU: Signals input to  
DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/  
EBU) INPUT 1/2 and 3/4  
connectors  
SG: Test signal from the  
internal signal generator  
1) Only when HDSDI is selected as the video input.  
Page P2  
Note  
The signal name display flashes when the selected signal  
is not being input. Input the selected signal, or select  
another signal.  
Setting item  
Description  
F1: TCG (timecode  
Sets the operation of the  
internal timecode generator.  
INT (internal): The count value  
advances from a preset  
initial value, or advances  
consecutively from the  
timecode of the last frame  
recorded on the disc.  
EXT (external): Synchronize  
to the timecode input to the  
TIME CODE IN connector.  
SDI: Synchronize to the  
timecode of the signal  
input to the HDSDI  
generator)  
Page P1  
Setting item  
Description  
F1: CNTR SEL (counter  
Selects the time data to display  
in the time data display section.  
TC: Timecode  
selection)  
UB: User bits  
COUNTER: Elapsed recording  
or playback time  
connector.  
F2: MONI CH (monitor  
Selects the audio channels to  
monitor.  
channel)  
CH 1/2: Channels 1 and 2  
CH 3/4: Channels 3 and 4  
F3: MONI SEL (monitor  
Selects the audio monitor  
signal output from the AUDIO  
MONITOR connector and the  
PHONES jack.  
selection)  
STEREO: Assign the channels  
selected with MONI CH to  
left and right.  
MONO L (monaural L  
channel): Output one of  
the channels selected with  
MONI CH.  
MONO R (monaural R  
channel): Output one of  
the channels selected with  
MONI CH.  
MIX: Output monaural audio  
mixed from the channels  
selected with MONI CH.  
F4: REC INH (recording  
Turns recording inhibit mode  
on and off.  
inhibit)  
ON: Recording inhibit mode on  
OFF: Recording inhibit mode  
off  
66  
Function Menu  
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Setting item  
Description  
System Menu  
F2: TC MODE (timecode  
When TCG is set to “INT”  
Selects whether the count  
value advances from a preset  
initial value, or advances  
consecutively from the  
timecode of the last frame  
recorded on the disc.  
PRESET: Advance from a  
preset initial value.  
mode)  
Use the system menu to set up the unit for specific  
purposes and conditions. Menu settings are stored in  
nonvolatile memory and are preserved even after the unit  
is powered off.  
REGEN (regenerate):  
Advance consecutively  
from the timecode of the  
last frame recorded on the  
disc.  
The system menu is made up of the following five menus.  
• Setup menu (SETUP MENU)  
• TC preset menu (TC PRESET)  
• Disc menu (DISC MENU)  
• Date and time preset menu (DATE/TIME PRESET)  
• Digital time display menu (HOURS METER)  
When TCG is set to “EXT”  
Selects whether to record  
timecode synchronized to  
external timecode from a  
preset initial value, or record  
the external timecode itself.  
PRESET: Record external  
timecode.  
This section explains the setup menu and the disc menu.  
more information about the date and time preset menu.  
REGEN (regenerate): Record  
timecode synchronized to  
external timecode from a  
preset initial value.  
for more information about the digital time display menu.  
Note  
Displaying the Setup and Disc  
Menus  
When TCG is set to “SDI”, the  
external timecode itself is  
always recorded.  
F3: RUN MODE  
When TCG is set to “INT”, and  
TC MODE is set to “PRESET”,  
selects the run mode of the  
internal timecode generator.  
REC RUN: The timecode  
generator runs only during  
recording.  
FREE RUN: The timecode  
generator runs as long as  
the unit is powered on.  
Menus appear in the monitor video section and in the time  
data display section. If you have connected an external  
monitor, they are also superimposed over the picture  
shown on that monitor.  
1
Press the MENU button.  
The system menu appears.  
SYSTEM MENU  
F4: TC/VITC  
Selects the type of timecode  
display in the time data display  
section (TC or VITC).  
SETUP MENU  
TC PRESET  
DISC MENU  
F5: DF/NDF  
(only when the system  
Use this item to select drop-  
frame mode (DF) or non-drop-  
DATE/TIME PRESET  
HOURS METER  
frequency is 60I/30P/24P frame mode (NDF).  
(pulldown))  
The entire system menu appears in the monitor video  
section and on the external monitor.  
An uppercase and lowercase abbreviation of the  
selected line only (the line in reverse video) appears in  
the time data display section.  
2
Press the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
SETUP MENU or DISC MENU.  
67  
System Menu  
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3
Press the ,/OUT button.  
Setup Menu  
The setup menu (see page 68) or the disc menu (see  
The setup menu has three levels.  
page 74) appears.  
The top level shows a general classification of the setting  
items in the menu. Except for MENU GRADE, the actual  
setting items are found on the second or third level.  
Setting items are divided into basic items, which are  
needed for normal operations, and enhanced items, which  
are needed for enhanced operations.  
SETUP MENU  
OPERATIONAL FUNCTION  
DISPLAY CONTROL  
SETUP BANK OPERATION  
MENU GRADE  
:BASIC  
When the unit is shipped from the factory, the setup menu  
is configured to display basic items only. To display  
enhanced items as well, change the setting of the MENU  
GRADE item.  
Setup Menu Items  
The purpose and settings of the setup menu items are  
described below.  
• An asterisk (*) (for example *EE) indicates that a setting  
is the factory default.  
• Brackets [ ] indicate characters and symbols that appear  
in the time data display section.  
OPERATIONAL FUNCTION [Operational]: Operation  
settings  
Description  
LOCAL ENABLE [> Local ENA]: Select the buttons that can ALL DISABLE [>> All DIS]: The EJECT button and the  
be operated on this unit even when the remote control  
switch is set to REMOTE.  
buttons in the recording/playback control block cannot be  
operated.  
*STOP & EJECT [>> STOP&EJ]: Only the STOP button and  
EJECT button can be operated.  
ALL ENABLE [>> All ENA]: The EJECT button and all of the  
buttons in the recording/playback control block can be  
operated. The preroll time can be set and time data can be  
selected on this unit.  
REC FORMAT [> REC format]: Select the recording format  
HQ [>> HQ]: 35Mbps  
*SP [>> SP]: 25Mbps  
LP [>> LP]: 18Mbps  
(MPEG-2 compression rate).  
DISC END [> Disc End]: Select what the unit should do when GOTO TOP [>> GOTO TOP]: Move to the top of the disc.  
the free disc capacity is exhausted during recording.  
END STOP [>> END STOP]: Stop at the end of the disc.  
*EJECT [>> EJECT]: Eject the disc automatically.  
CLIP TITLE [> Clip Title]:  
Specify how to assign clip  
titles.  
AUTO TITLE [>> AT Title]:  
*DISABLE [>>> DISABLE]: Do not assign.  
Select whether to assign ENABLE [>>> ENABLE]: Assign.  
clip titles automatically.  
TITLE [>> Title]: Assign  
The CLIP AUTO TITLING screen appears.  
arbitrary titles.  
For details, see To assign clip titles” (page 47) in Chapter 4.  
FILE NAMING [> File Name]: NAMING FORM [>> Name  
*C**** [>>> C****]: Standard format  
free [>>> free]: Enable free format.  
Specify the clip and clip  
list name format  
Form]: Specify the clip  
and clip list name format.  
AUTO NAMING [>> AT  
Naming]: Specify the  
format of the file names  
generated when clips are  
recorded.  
*C**** [>>> C****]: Standard format  
title [>>> title]: Assign the same name as clip title.  
68  
System Menu  
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OPERATIONAL FUNCTION [Operational]: Operation  
settings  
Description  
SYSTEM SEL [> System  
Sel]: Select the system  
frequency and area of  
use.  
SYSTEM FREQ [>> Sys  
*60I [>>> 60i]: 59.94i  
Freq]: Select the system 50I [>>> 50i]: 50i  
frequency.  
30P [>>> 30P]: 29.97P  
25P [>>> 25P]: 25P  
UC/J [>> UC/J]: Select the  
UC [>>> UC]: For areas outside Japan  
*J [>>> J]: For Japan  
Note  
area of use.  
After changing any of the sub-  
items, power the unit off and  
then power it on again. The  
initial settings of the setup  
menu as a whole will change  
to reflect the settings made  
here.  
VAR SPD LIMIT [> VAR limit]: Specify whether to limit the  
*OFF [>> OFF]: –1 to +2 times normal speed  
ON [>> ON]: 0 to +1 times normal speed  
speed of variable speed playback  
ASM POSTROLL [> Postroll]: Specify whether to record  
OFF [>> OFF]: Do not record postroll.  
*ON [>> ON]: Record postroll.  
postroll when executing assemble editing  
DISPLAY CONTROL [Display]: Settings related to display Description  
on the LCD panel of this unit and on an external monitor  
SUB STATUS [> Sub status]: Select the supplementary  
*OFF [>> OFF]: No supplementary status information  
status information shown in the monitor video section and TC MODE [>> TC mode]: Indications of the operating mode of  
on an external monitor.  
internal timecode generator  
REMAIN [>> Remain]: Free capacity on the disc (in minute  
units)  
CLIP NO [>> Clp No]: Clip number  
PLAYBACK REMAIN [>> PB remain]:Time from the current  
playback position to the recording end position, displayed  
in time data format  
For details of supplementary status information displayed on  
the monitor when a setting other than OFF is selected, see  
Chapter 2.  
BRIGHTNESS [> Brightness]: Adjust the brightness of the  
The LCD BRIGHTNESS screen appears.  
Factory default setting: *55  
display.  
more information about how to adjust the brightness.  
ALARM [> ALARM]: Select whether to display alarm  
OFF [>> OFF]: In general, do not display alarm messages.  
However, do display some important alarm messages.  
ON(LIMITED) [>> ON(Limit)]: Display a minimum number of  
alarm messages.  
messages.  
*ON [>> ON]: Display all alarm messages.  
HD CHARA [> HD cha]: Specify whether, when CHAR SEL  
OFF [>> OFF]: Forcibly turn off superimposition of text  
on page P1 of the function menu is set to “ON”, to forcibly  
information.  
turn off superimposition of text information on HD output. *FUNCTION MENU [>> F-MENU]: Do not forcibly turn off  
superimposition of text information. (The setting of CHAR  
SEL in the function menu takes priority.)  
VIDEO CONTROL [Video]: Settings related to video  
control  
Description  
FRAME PB [> Frame PB]: Select whether to output fields or *AUTO [>> AUTO]: Output a field image when the format is  
frames as still images of video.  
interlaced, and output a frame image when the format is  
progressive.  
FRAME[>> FRAME]: Always output a frame image.  
69  
System Menu  
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VIDEO CONTROL [Video]: Settings related to video  
control  
Description  
DOWN CONVERTER [>  
Down conv]: Set up the  
down converter.  
CONV MODE [>> Conv  
mode]: Select the  
conversion mode.  
*EDGE CROP [>>> Edge Crop]: Edge crop mode  
LETER BOX [>>> LetterBox]: Letter box mode  
SQEEZE [>>> Squeeze]: Squeeze mode  
Note  
“SQEEZE” (squeeze mode) is  
selected automatically during  
recording.  
DETAIL GAIN [>> Detail]:  
Select the gain level of  
the down converter  
*LOW [>>> Low]: Low  
MID [>>> Mid]: Mid  
HIGH [>>> High]: High  
image enhancer.  
CROSS COLOR [>> Cross  
col]: Turn cross color  
adjustment on or off.  
*OFF [>>> OFF]: The image enhancer uses default settings  
for cross color.  
ON [>>> ON]: The image enhancer adjusts so that there are  
fewer cross colors.  
AUDIO CONTROL [Audio]: Settings related to audio  
control  
Description  
REC MODE [> REC mode]: Select the audio recording mode. *4ch×16bit [>> 4ch/16bit]: 4-channel, 48-kHz mode  
2ch×16bit [>> 2ch/16bit]: 2-channel, 48-kHz mode  
LEVEL SELECT  
[> Level Sel]  
REF LEVEL [>> REF Level]: *–20dB [>>> –20dB]  
Specify the reference  
level (headroom) for  
audio signals recorded to –12dB [>>> –12dB]  
–18dB [>>> –18dB]  
–16dB [>>> –16dB]  
disc.  
CH1 IN LEVEL [>> CH1  
*+4dB [>>> +4dB]  
input]: Select the audio 0dB [>>> 0dB]  
level setting according to –3dB [>>> –3dB]  
the audio level of the  
signal input to the AUDIO  
INPUT 1/3 connector.  
–6dB [>>> –6dB]  
CH2 IN LEVEL [>> CH2  
input]: Select the audio  
level setting according to  
the audio level of the  
signal input to the AUDIO  
INPUT 2/4 connector.  
OUTPUT LEVEL [>> Out  
Level]: Select the analog  
audio output reference  
level.  
DV OUT MODE [> DV out mod]: Select the audio output  
4ch [>> 4ch]: 12 bit/32 kHz/4ch  
*2ch [>> 2ch]: 16 bit/48 kHz/2ch  
mode of the S400 connector.  
INTERFACE SELECT [Interface]: Settings related to  
interfaces  
Description  
D-SUB OUTPUT [> D-SUB Out]: Select the format of the  
XGA(SYSTEM) [>> XGA(SYS)]: Set to XGA monitor output  
(according to system frequency).  
signal output from the MONITOR connector.  
*XGA(60Hz) [>> XGA(60Hz)]: Set to XGA monitor output  
(fixed at 60 Hz).  
YPbPr [>> YPbPr]: Y/R–Y/B–Y component video signals  
AUDIO OUTPUT [> Audio Out]: Select the channels for audio *CH1/CH2 [>> CH1/CH2]: Output channel 1 to the AUDIO  
output from the AUDIO OUTPUT 1/3 and 2/4 connectors.  
OUTPUT 1/3 connector and channel 2 to the AUDIO  
OUTPUT 2/4 connector.  
CH3/CH4 [>> CH3/CH4]: Output channel 3 to the AUDIO  
OUTPUT 1/3 connector and channel 4 to the AUDIO  
OUTPUT 2/4 connector.  
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INTERFACE SELECT [Interface]: Settings related to  
interfaces  
Description  
REMOTE I/F [> Remote I/F]: Select how to perform remote  
control, when the remote control switch is set to  
REMOTE.  
i.LINK [>> i.LINK]: Use the S400 connector.  
*9PIN/RS-232C [>> 9P/232C]: Use either the REMOTE(9P)  
connector or the RS232C connector, depending on the  
setting of the remote connector selector switch.  
9PIN(PARA)[>> Para Run]: Use the REMOTE(9P) connector  
to connect several PDW-70MD units and perform remote  
control from one of them specified as the parent.  
BAUDRATE [> BaudRate]: Select the communications speed *9600 [>> 9600]  
(bps) of the RS232C connector.  
19200 [>> 19200]  
38400 [>> 38400]  
57600 [>> 57600]  
115200 [>> 115200]  
i.LINK MODE [> i.LinkMode]: Select the type of connection *AV/C [>> AV/C]: AV/C connection.  
FAM(PC REMOTE) [>> FAM]: FAM connection.  
for the S400 connector.  
METADATA [Metadata]: Metadata settings  
Description  
INDEX POSITION [> Index Pos]: Specify which frame to use 0SEC [>> 0 sec] to 10SEC [>> 10 sec]: The frame at 0  
as the thumbnail image (index picture) when recording.  
seconds to 10 seconds from the top of the clip, specified in  
units of 1 second.  
Factory default setting: *0SEC  
STORE OWNER [> Ownership]: Create UMID owner  
The STORED OWNERSHIP screen appears.  
information.  
For details, see Appendix “Setting UMID ownership  
MENU GRADE [Menu grade]: Selection of menu items to Description  
be displayed  
Determine whether to display basic items only or both basic  
and enhanced items on the monitor screen and in the time  
data display section when using the setup menu.  
*BASIC [>> Basic]: Display basic items only.  
ENHANCED [>> Enhanced]: Display both basic and  
enhanced items.  
Menu control buttons  
Functions  
Setup Menu Operations  
</IN and ,/OUT buttons Press the ,/OUT button to go  
down one level.  
This section explains how to change menu settings.  
Press the </IN button to go  
up one level.  
Hold down one of these  
buttons to make the highlighted  
cursor move continuously.  
Buttons used to change settings  
Use the following buttons to change menu settings.  
RESET button  
SET button  
• Returns the setting to the  
factory default setting.  
• Answer “No” to the question.  
Menu control buttons  
Functions  
MENU button  
• Display and hide the menu.  
• Return to the menu from  
setting screens.  
• Saves the new setting in  
memory.  
• Answer Yes” to the question.  
M/MARK1 and m/MARK2 These buttons move the  
buttons  
highlighted cursor up and down  
within the current level to select  
an item or setting. Hold down  
one of these buttons to make  
the highlighted cursor move  
continuously.  
Changing the settings of basic items  
The factory default setting is to display only the basic  
items. To change the settings of basic items, proceed as  
follows.  
1
Press the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
the required item.  
71  
System Menu  
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Example: Screen display when DISPLAY  
This displays all possible settings for the item selected  
in step 3.  
CONTROL is selected  
SETUP MENU  
SETUP MENU  
OPERATIONAL FUNCTION  
DISPLAY CONTROL  
DISPLAY CONTROL  
:OFF  
SUB STATUS  
* OFF  
SETUP BANK OPERATION  
TC MODE  
REMAIN  
MENU GRADE  
:BASIC  
CLIP NAME  
5
Press the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to change  
2
Press the ,/OUT button.  
the setting of the item.  
This displays menu level 2 for the menu item selected  
in step 1.  
SETUP MENU  
Example: Screen display of the second level of the  
DISPLAY CONTROL menu  
DISPLAY CONTROL  
:OFF  
SUB STATUS  
* OFF  
TC MODE  
REMAIN  
SETUP MENU  
DISPLAY CONTROL  
CLIP NAME  
:OFF  
:55%  
:ON  
SUB STATUS  
BRIGHTNESS  
ALARM  
6
7
To change other settings, press the </IN button to  
return to the previous screen, then repeat steps 3 to 5  
as required.  
Current setting  
When you have completed the settings, press the SET  
button.  
3
Press the M/MARK1 or m/MARK2 button to select  
the required item.  
The message “NOW SAVING...” appears on the  
monitor screen, and “Saving...” appears in the time  
counter display, while the new settings are saved in  
memory.  
When the saving operation is completed, the monitor  
screen and time data display section return to their  
normal indications.  
For menu items on level 3, press the ,/OUT button  
to go to level 3, then press the M/MARK1 or m/  
MARK2 button to select the item whose setting you  
wish to change.  
Example: Screen display when SUB STATUS is  
selected  
Notes  
SETUP MENU  
DISPLAY CONTROL  
• If you power off the unit before a save operation is  
completed, settings may be lost. Wait until the save  
is completed before powering off the unit.  
:OFF  
:55%  
:ON  
SUB STATUS  
BRIGHTNESS  
ALARM  
• If, instead of pressing the SET button, you press the  
MENU button, the new settings are not saved. The  
message “ABORT !” appears on the monitor screen  
and “Abort !” in the time counter display for about  
0.5 second, and the system exits the menus. To  
change more than one setting, be sure to press the  
SET button after making the settings.  
4
Press the ,/OUT button.  
72  
System Menu  
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Meanings of indications on the menu  
screen  
SETUP MENU  
OPERATIONAL FUNCTION  
DISPLAY CONTROL  
TIME CODE  
On-screen indication  
Right-pointing arrow (c) at Pressing the ,/OUT button  
the right of a menu item switches to the next lower  
Meaning  
DISC PROTECTION  
VIDEO CONTROL  
AUDIO CONTROL  
INTERFACE SELECT  
METADATA  
See step 1 of the foregoing menu level or to a setting  
selection screen.  
operating procedure (see  
SETUP BANK OPERATION  
ENHAN  
MENU GRADE  
Left-pointing arrow (C) at  
Pressing the </IN button  
the left of a menu item  
returns to the previous (higher)  
Current setting  
See step 2 of the foregoing menu level.  
operating procedure (see  
Changing the settings of enhanced items  
To change the settings of enhanced items, first carry out  
the procedure in the previous section “Displaying  
enhanced items” then proceed as follows.  
Character string at the  
right of a menu item  
Current setting of the menu  
item  
When shown with a colon (:):  
the current setting is the  
same as the factory default  
setting.  
1
In the setup menu screen, repeat steps 2 to 7 of  
“Changing the Settings of Basic Items”, and then use  
the </IN, ,/OUT, M/MARK1, m/MARK2 buttons  
to select a menu item and change the setting.  
See step 2 of the foregoing  
operating procedure (see  
When shown with a raised  
dot (·): the current setting  
is different from the factory  
default setting.  
2
When you have completed the settings, press the SET  
button.  
See the next item,  
The message “NOW SAVING...” appears on the  
monitor screen, and “Saving...” appears in the time  
counter display, while the new settings are saved in  
memory.  
When the saving operation is completed, the monitor  
screen and time data display section return to their  
normal indications.  
An * (asterisk) in a  
Factory default setting  
complete list of settings  
See step 4 of the foregoing  
operating procedure (see  
Displaying enhanced items  
The factory default setting is not to display enhanced  
items.  
Returning menu settings to their factory  
default settings  
After making menu setting changes, to return settings to  
their factory default settings (setting initialization), use the  
following procedure.  
To display enhanced items, set the menu item MENU  
GRADE to “ENHANCED”, following the procedure in  
items”. In step 1, first select “MENU GRADE”, and next  
select “ENHANCED”, then press the SET button to save  
the setting in memory.  
With this done, when you press the MENU button and the  
,/OUT button to display the setup menu, all basic and  
enhanced items on menu level 1 appear.  
To return a particular setting to its factory default  
setting  
71), carry out the procedure up to step 5, then with the  
current setting displayed (in the example, if the factory  
default setting has been changed, the current setting will be  
TC MODE), proceed as follows.  
1
2
Press the RESET button.  
“OFF” (factory default setting) is selected.  
Press the SET button.  
The setting returned to its factory default is saved in  
memory as the current setting.  
73  
System Menu  
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To return all settings to their factory default  
settings  
The disc menu contains the following items. Characters  
and symbols inside the brackets [ ] appear in the time data  
display section.  
1
2
Display the setup menu.  
Press the RESET button.  
STATUS [Status]  
Displays disc or clip status.  
DISC [> Disc]: Displays the DISC STATUS screen.  
CLIP [> Clip]: Displays the CLIP STATUS screen.  
A message appears, to confirm whether or not you  
wish to return all settings to their factory default  
settings.  
Note  
Monitor screen  
message  
Initialize all items to factory  
preset values?  
The PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software allows you to write  
TITLE1 and TITLE 2 to the disc, but only TITLE1 appears  
here.  
Message in the time  
data display  
Init setup?  
DELETE [Delete]  
Deletes clips from the disc.  
3
Press the SET button.  
LAST CLIP [> Last Clip]: Deletes the most recently  
recorded clip.  
ALL CLIP [> All Clip]: Delete all clips. (Clips in the  
General directory are not deleted.)  
The message “NOW SAVING...” appears on the  
monitor screen, and “Saving...” appears in the time  
data display, while the settings of all items are returned  
to their factory default settings. These factory default  
settings are saved in memory.  
FORMAT [Format]  
Formats a disc.  
QUICK FORMAT [>Quick Format]: Deletes all  
data on the disc, including the contents of the  
General directory.  
Note  
If you power off the unit while settings are being  
saved, settings may not be correctly returned to their  
factory default settings. Wait until the saving is  
completed before powering off the unit.  
Disc Menu Operations  
To abandon the resetting operation  
Instead of pressing the SET button, press the RESET  
button.  
To display the status of the current disc or  
clip  
The display returns to the top level of setup menu,  
leaving the settings unchanged.  
Insert a disc, and then proceed as follows.  
1
2
Display the disc menu (see page 67).  
Press the M/MARK1 button or m/MARK2 button to  
select STATUS.  
Disc Menu  
Use the disc menu to delete data on discs and to format  
discs.  
3
4
Press the ,/OUT button.  
Select DISC or CLIP and press the ,/OUT button.  
For the method of displaying the disc menu, see  
If you selected DISC, the status of the loaded disc  
appears.  
DISC MENU  
STATUS  
DELETE  
FORMAT  
DISC STATUS  
USER ID:  
TITLE :  
REMAIN  
: 029 min  
: 0002 times  
REWRITE  
SALVAGE  
:
:
OK  
OK  
FILE SYSTEM  
TO MENU :  
MENU KEY  
74  
System Menu  
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If you selected CLIP, the status of the current clip  
appears.  
Proceed as follows.  
1
2
Display the disc menu (see page 67).  
CLIP STATUS  
CLIP LIST MODE  
Press the M/MARK1 button or the m/MARK2 button  
to select DELETE.  
:
E0001  
E0001  
CLIP LIST NEME  
TITLE:  
:
:
:
:
PDW-F70  
10001  
RECORD DEVICE  
3
4
5
Press the ,/OUT button.  
SERIAL  
06/3/02  
19:54:38  
DATE  
Select ALL CLIP, then press the ,/OUT button.  
TIME  
:
MENU KEY  
TO MENU  
When the message “ALL DELETE OK?” appears,  
press the SET button.  
When playback or search reaches a new clip, the  
display changes to the status of the new clip.  
All of the clips on the disc are deleted.  
To return to the next highest level without deleting  
the clips  
Press the RESET button.  
To return to the next highest level  
Press the MENU button.  
To clear the menu from the screen  
Press the MENU button twice.  
To clear the menu from the screen  
Press the MENU button.  
To delete the most recent recorded clip  
To format a disc  
Note  
If the clip is locked, it cannot be deleted.  
Proceed as follows.  
1
2
Display the disc menu (see page 67).  
Press the M/MARK1 button or the m/MARK2 button  
to select DELETE.  
3
4
Press the ,/OUT button.  
The name of the clip to be deleted appears.  
Press the SET button.  
The clip is deleted, and the number of the deleted clip  
appears.  
To return to the next highest level without deleting  
the clip  
Press the MENU button.  
To clear the menu from the screen  
Press the MENU button twice.  
To delete all clips  
Note  
Carrying out the following procedure deletes all clips that  
are not locked.  
75  
System Menu  
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Appendix  
temperature inside a car with the windows closed can  
easily exceed 50°C (122°F).  
• In damp or dusty locations  
• Locations where the unit may be exposed to rain  
• Locations subject to violent vibration  
• Near strong magnetic fields  
Important Notes on  
Operation  
• Close to radio or TV transmitters producing strong  
electromagnetic fields.  
Use and storage  
• In direct sunlight or close to heaters for extended periods  
Do not subject the unit to severe shocks  
The internal mechanism may be damaged or the body  
warped.  
To prevent electromagnetic interference from  
portable communications devices  
The use of portable telephones and other communications  
devices near this unit can result in malfunctions and  
interference with audio and video signals.  
Do not cover the unit while operating  
Doing so will cause temperatures to rise inside the unit,  
possibly resulting in failure.  
It is recommended that the portable communications  
devices near this unit be powered off.  
After use  
Turn off the on/standby switch.  
If you plan not to use the unit for a long time, turn off the  
POWER switch on the rear panel as well.  
About the LCD panel  
LCD panels are manufactured with extremely high  
precision technology that yields effective pixel rates of  
99.99% or higher. However, very rarely, one or more  
pixels may be permanently dark or permanently lit in  
white, red, blue, or green.  
This phenomenon is not a malfunction. Such pixels have  
no effect on the recorded data, and the unit may be used  
with confidence even if they are present.  
Shipping  
• Remove the disc before transporting the unit.  
• If sending the unit by truck, ship, air or other  
transportation service, pack it in the shipping carton of  
the unit.  
Care of the unit  
If the body of the unit is dirty, clean it with a soft, dry cloth.  
In extreme cases, use a cloth steeped in a little neutral  
detergent, then wipe dry. Do not use organic solvents such  
as alcohol or thinners, as these may cause discoloration or  
other damage to the finish of the unit.  
Condensation  
If you move the unit from a very cold place to a warm  
place, or use it in a damp location, condensation may form  
on the optical pickup. Then, if the unit is operated in this  
state, recording and playback may not be performed  
properly.  
In the event of operating problems  
If you should experience problems with the unit, contact  
your Sony dealer.  
Do the following to prevent this from happening.  
• When you move or operate the unit in an environment  
where condensation may form, be sure to insert a disc in  
advance.  
• Whenever you turn on the On/standby switch, check that  
the HUMID indicator does not appear on the LCD panel,  
Use and storage locations  
Store in a level, ventilated place. Avoid using or storing the  
unit in the following places.  
• In excessive heat or cold (operating temperature range:  
5°C to 40°C (41°F to 104°F))  
Remember that in summer or in warm climates the  
76  
Important Notes on Operation  
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If it appears, wait until it disappears before inserting a  
disc.  
Periodic Maintenance  
Digital Hours Meter  
The digital hours meter can provide information about the  
operational history of the unit. Use the information as a  
guide in scheduling periodic maintenance. For periodic  
maintenance, contact your Sony dealer.  
To display digital hours meter  
The digital hours meter appears in both the monitor video  
section and time data display section as the digital hours  
meter menu of the system menu. It can also be  
superimposed on the screen of the external video monitor  
connected to the unit (see page 29).  
To display the digital hours meter, proceed as follows.  
1
2
Press the MENU button to display the system menu.  
Press the M/MARK1 button or m/MARK2 button,  
select the HOURS METER (Hours Meter in the time  
data display section), and then press the SET button.  
HOURS METER  
HOURS  
HOURS  
HOURS  
TIMES  
H1  
H2  
H3  
H4  
H5  
317/  
22  
317  
92  
92  
114  
H1:OPERATION  
H2:LASER PARAMETER  
H3:SEEK RUNNING  
H4:SPINDLE RUNNING  
H5:LOADING COUNTER  
Display of the digital hours meter  
Any of the items can be reset during periodic maintenance  
or parts replacement. Resetting items allows you to  
roughly determine the timing of next periodic  
maintenance.  
For display resetting, contact your Sony dealer.  
Item name (name between Description  
[ ] is name in the time data  
display section)  
H1: OPERATION [Opr]  
Displays the total number of  
hours the unit has been  
powered on in units of hours.  
H2: LASER PARAMETER  
This shows the cumulative  
light output time for optical  
head in units of hours.  
[Lasr]  
77  
Periodic Maintenance  
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Item name (name between Description  
[ ] is name in the time data  
display section)  
Troubleshooting  
H3: SEEK RUNNING[Seek] This shows the cumulative  
seek operation time for  
optical head in units of  
hours.  
Alarms  
H4: SPINDLE  
RUNNING[Spdl]  
This shows the cumulative  
spindle rotation time in units  
of hours.  
An alarm (warning message) appears in the time data  
display section when an operation is attempted which is  
inappropriate for the settings on this unit or the state of the  
disc. Both the alarm message and the action to take to  
resolve the problem appear in the monitor video section  
and on the screen of the external video monitor connected  
to the unit.  
H5: LOADING  
COUNTER[Load]  
Display the total number of  
times discs have been  
loaded in the unit.  
To exit from the digital hours meter  
Press the MENU button.  
Example alarm in time data display section  
ALARM  
REMOTE MODE IS SELECTED.  
SET REMOTE/LOCAL/NETWORK  
SWITCH TO LOCAL.  
Example alarm in monitor video section  
When an alarm is displayed, remove the alarm cause by  
following the action to take. If the alarm display does not  
disappear, contact your Sony dealer.  
Please note that there are some alarms which do not appear  
depending on the setting of DISPLAY CONTROL  
>ALARM in the setup menu (see page 69).  
See “System Menu” (page 67) for more information about  
setup menu operations.  
When the unit is powered on  
Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video section  
Description/action  
MENU Ver. UP  
ILL. SETUP!  
THE SETUP MENU SOFTWARE HAS BEEN  
UPGRADED.  
SET THE SETUP MENU ITEMS TO THE  
DESIRED SETTINGS.  
Reset the settings in the setup menu (see page  
68).  
INVALID SETTINGS SELECTED IN SETUP  
MENU.  
SET ITEMS IN THE SETUP MENU TO THE  
APPROPRIATE VALUES. CONTACT SERVICE  
IF THIS ALARM APPEARS AGAIN AFTER  
ABOVE PROCEDURE.  
Reset the settings in the setup menu (see page  
68). If the same message appears after you  
reset the settings, contact your Sony dealer.  
Exchg batt!  
BATTERY NEEDS REPLACING. PLEASE  
CONTACT SERVICE.  
The NVRAM battery is exhausted. Contact your  
Sony dealer.  
78  
Troubleshooting  
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When a disc is inserted  
Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
Unknown FS!  
UNKNOWN FILE SYSTEM.  
PLEASE FORMAT DISC OR EJECT.  
Format the disc, or eject it (see page 33).  
No FS!  
NO FILE SYSTEM.PLEASE EJECT DISC. Eject the disc.  
ILL. Disc!  
IRREGULAR DISC IS USED.  
USE PROFESSIONAL DISC.  
Use a Professional Disc.  
Salvage NG!  
CLIP SALVAGE WAS NOT COMPLETED. See “Handling of Discs When Recording Does Not  
a)  
IRREGULAR DISC IS USED. DVCAM  
525/60 CLIP(S) EXIST.  
Use another disc.  
525/60 Clip  
a)  
IRREGULAR DISC IS USED. DVCAM  
625/50 CLIP(S) EXIST.  
625/50 Clip  
a)  
DISC HAS 4CHx16 BIT CLIP(S).  
CHANGE RECORD FORMAT IN SETUP MODE in the setup menu (see page 70).  
Change the setting of AUDIO CONTROL >REC  
4CHx16 Clip  
MENU.  
a)  
DISC HAS 2CHx16 BIT CLIP(S).  
CHANGE RECORD FORMAT IN SETUP MODE in the setup menu (see page 70).  
Change the setting of AUDIO CONTROL >REC  
2CHx16 Clip  
MENU.  
No Support!  
FORMAT NOT SUPPORTED.  
RECORDING AND PLAYBACK IS NOT  
POSSIBLE.  
A disc in an unsupported recording format is loaded.  
Use a disc formatted in the MPEG HD or DVCAM  
format.  
ILL. Index!  
INDEX FILE ERROR.  
PLEASE FORMAT DISC OR EJECT.  
Format the disc, or eject it (see page 33).  
FORMAT NG!  
AUTO FORMATTING WAS NOT  
COMPLETED.  
Eject the disc and insert it again, or insert another  
disc.  
DI read err  
Read err  
CANNOT READ DISC  
INFORMATION.PLEASE EJECT DISC.  
DRV ADJ err  
CANNOT PERFORM AUTO DRIVE  
ADJUSTMENT.  
a) Displayed only when DISPLAY CONTROL >ALARM is set to “ON” or  
“LIMITED”.  
During front panel operations  
Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
a)  
KEY INHIBIT MODE IS SELECTED.  
This appears when the KEY INH (SHIFT + DISPLAY)  
button is on.  
KEY INHI.!  
Turn the KEY INH button off.  
a)  
REMOTE MODE IS SELECTED.  
SET REMOTE/LOCAL/NETWORK  
SWITCH TO LOCAL.  
Set the remote control switch to “LOCAL.  
REMOTE!  
a)  
NO DISC.  
Insert a disc and try again.  
No Disc!  
REC INHI.!  
THE DISC WRITE PROTECT TAB IS SET Set the disc’s Write Inhibit tab to enable recording  
TO SAVE.  
REC INHIBIT MODE IS SELECTED.  
This appears when REC INH on page P1 of the  
function menu is set to “ON”.  
Set REC INH to “OFF” (see page 66).  
b)  
NO CLIP.  
This appears when a playback, search or delete  
operation is attempted on a disc with no clips  
recorded on it.  
No Clip!  
Insert a disc with clips recorded on it.  
79  
Troubleshooting  
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Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
a)  
DISC TOP.  
This appears if you press the PREV button or conduct  
a high-speed reverse search when the unit is stopped  
at the start of the disc.  
Disc Top!  
Use forward search or playback instead.  
a)  
DISC END.  
This appears if you press the NEXT button or conduct  
a forward high-speed search when the unit is stopped  
at the end of the disc.  
Disc End!  
Use reverse search or playback instead.  
MAX # Files  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED TO.  
FOR MORE RECORDING SPACE,  
DELETE CLIPS OR NON-AV DATA.  
(GENERAL FILES)  
Delete clips or GENERAL files.  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED TO.FOR Delete unneeded clips, or insert a disc with enough  
MORE RECORDING SPACE, DELETE  
OTHER CLIP LISTS.  
free space.  
Disc Full!  
DISC FULL.FOR MORE RECORDING,  
DELETE SOME CLIPS.  
Delete unneeded clips, or insert a disc with enough  
free space.  
b)  
NO MORE SUB CLIPS CAN BE ADDED  
TO CLIP LIST.  
This appears when an attempt is made to add sub  
clips when 300 sub clips have already been  
registered.  
MAX# SB CLP  
Limit the creation of sub clips to 300 or fewer.  
b)  
DURATION OF ONE CLIP LIST MUST BE This appears when you try to add a sub clip when the  
CL OVER DUR  
LESS THAN 24 HOURS.  
total duration of sub clips in a clip list has already  
reached 24 hours.  
Create clip lists so that the total duration is within 24  
hours.  
Run Salvage  
EXECUTE SALVAGE PROGRAM.  
This appears when recording, E-E display, essence  
mark recording, or sub clip addition for quick scene  
selection is attempted on a disc that needs to be  
salvaged.  
Try again after salvaging the clips on the disc (see  
a)  
COUNTER MODE IS SELECTED.  
SET COUNTER SELECT SWITCH TO TC function menu is set to “COUNTER”, and you try to  
This appears when CNTR SEL on page P1 of the  
CNT mode!  
OR UB.  
preset timecode or user bits.  
To use timecode or user bits, set CNTR SEL to “TC”  
or “UB” (see page 66).  
b)  
TC EXTERNAL IS SELECTED.  
SET TC INTERNAL MODE IN FUNCTION menu is set to “EXT”, and you try to preset timecode  
This appears when TCG on page P2 of the function  
TC EXT!  
MENU.  
or user bits by setting TC MODE to “PRESET”.  
Set TCG to “INT” (see page 66).  
a)  
TCG REGEN MODE IS SELECTED.  
SET TC PRESET MODE IN FUNCTION  
MENU.  
This appears when TC MODE on page P2 of the  
function menu is set to “REGEN”, and you try to  
preset timecode or user bits.  
REGEN mode!  
Set TC MODE to “PRESET” (see page 67).  
a)  
TCG RUN MODE IS SET TO REC RUN.  
SET TC FREE RUN MODE IN FUNCTION function menu is set to “REC RUN”, and you try to  
This appears when RUN MODE on page P2 of the  
REC RUN!  
MENU.  
preset timecode or user bits.  
Set RUN MODE to “FREE RUN” (see page 67).  
b)  
THUMBNAIL(S) CANNOT BE  
DISPLAYED DURING RECORDING.  
Stop recording and try again.  
REC mode!  
CANNOT EXECUTE IN REC MODE.  
DRIVE MAINTENANCE MENU CANNOT  
BE EXECUTED WHILE IN REC MODE.  
b)  
CLIP LIST IS NOT SELECTED.  
This appears when you press the SUB CLIP button  
while the clip list on the disc is not loaded into the  
current clip list.  
No SEL List  
Load the clip list (see page 49) and try again.  
80  
Troubleshooting  
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Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
a)  
CLIP LIST CANNOT LOCATE SPECIFIED This appears when a playback button is pressed with  
No SUB CLIP  
SUB CLIP(S).  
no sub clips in the current clip list.  
Playback is not possible when there are no sub clips  
in the current clip list.  
b)  
TO ADD AN ESSENCE MARK, EXIT  
FROM SUB CLIP MODE FIRST.  
This appears when you press the ESSENCE MARK  
(SHIFT + THUMBNAIL) button with the SUB CLIP  
SB CLP mode  
button lit.  
Try again after pressing the SUB CLIP button to turn it  
off.  
b)  
SUB CLIP IS INVALID.  
SET APPROPRIATE IN/OUT POINTS.  
Set the In and Out points again.  
SUB CLIP NG  
b)  
NO CLIP LIST.  
This appears when you try to delete a clip list when  
there is no clip list saved on the disc.  
Load the disc that contains the clip list you want to  
delete.  
No List!  
b)  
STOP ONCE, THEN EXECUTE.  
This appears when you press the SUB CLIP button  
during clip list playback.  
STOP ONCE!  
Stop the playback and try again.  
No EM space  
ESSENCE MARK NOT RECORDED.  
NO SPACE AVAILABLE TO RECORD  
ESSENCE MARK.  
Use the PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software to delete  
unneeded essence marks.  
EM Full!  
NO MORE ESSENCE MARKS CAN BE  
RECORDED.  
Disc Damage  
NON-AV Full  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED TO.  
USE ANOTHER DISC FOR RECORDING.  
Use another disc.  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED TO.  
FOR MORE RECORDING SPACE,  
DELETE CLIPS OR NON-AV DATA.  
(GENERAL FILES)  
Delete unneeded clips or GENERAL files.  
Index File!  
UNSUPPORT INDEX FILE.  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED TO.  
Use another disc.  
File System  
CURRENT VERSION OF THE  
SOFTWARE SETS THE DISC WRITE  
PROTECTED.  
This appears when you insert a disc that can be  
played back but not recorded.  
Exchange the disc for one with a file system  
supported by this unit. Or format the disc (see page  
33).  
FILE SYSTEM ON THE DISC INHIBITS  
WRITING.  
a)  
LOADING.  
This appears if you press a button while a disc is  
loading. Wait until the disc has finished loading and  
try again.  
Loading!  
a)  
UNLOADING.  
This appears if you press a button while a disc is  
unloading.  
Unloading!  
Wait until the disc has finished unloading and try  
again.  
a) Displayed only when DISPLAY CONTROL >ALARM is set to “ON”.  
b) Displayed only when DISPLAY CONTROL >ALARM is set to “ON” or  
“LIMITED”.  
During recording and editing operations  
Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
a)  
INPUT SIGNAL FREQUENCY IS NOT  
THE SAME AS THE SYSTEM SETUP.  
This appears when an input signal does not match  
the system frequency of this unit.  
Input Sig!”  
Input a signal that matches the system frequency, or  
change this unit's system frequency setting (see page  
22).  
81  
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Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED. HD 60I  
or HD 30P CLIP(S) EXIST.  
This appears when the system frequency of this unit  
does not match that of the loaded disc.  
Insert a disc that matches the system frequency, or  
change this unit's system frequency setting (see page  
22).  
HD 60I/30P  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED. HD 50I  
or HD 25P CLIP(S) EXIST.  
HD 50I/25P  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE RECORDED. HD  
23.98P CLIP(S) EXIST.  
HD 23P Disc  
a)  
INPUT VIDEO SIGNAL DOES NOT  
SYNCHRONIZE WITH REF VIDEO  
SIGNAL.  
Input a reference signal synchronized with this unit’s  
system frequency.  
ILL. REF!  
USE COMMON REFERENCE SIGNAL  
OR CONNECT RECORDER REF OUT TO  
PLAYER REF IN.  
a)  
ENCODING DOES NOT SYNCHRONIZE Check the signals being input to this unit.  
WITH REF VIDEO.  
ILL. REC!  
a)  
ILLEGAL PLAYBACK.  
MEMORY FULL !!  
Check the disc being played by this unit.  
Check the disc being recorded by this unit.  
ILL. PLAY!  
a)  
MEM. Full!  
a)  
MEMORY EMPTY !!  
NOW RECORDING ...  
MEM. Empty!  
Recording  
Wait for recording to finish.  
a) Displayed only when DISPLAY CONTROL >ALARM is set to “ON” or  
“LIMITED”.  
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During playback  
Alarm message in time data  
display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED BACK.  
USE DISC WITH HD 50I or HD 25P  
RECORDING.  
This appears when the system frequency of this  
unit does not match that of the loaded disc.  
Insert a disc that matches the system frequency,  
or change this unit's system frequency setting  
525/60 Disc  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED BACK.  
USE DISC WITH DVCAM 625/50  
RECORDING.  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED BACK.  
USE DISC WITH HD 60I or HD 30P  
RECORDING.  
625/50 Disc  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED BACK.  
USE DISC WITH DVCAM 525/60  
RECORDING.  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED BACK.  
USE DISC WITH HD 50I or HD 25P  
RECORDING.  
HD 60I/30P  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED BACK.  
USE DISC WITH DVCAM 625/50  
RECORDING.  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED  
BACK.USE DISC WITH HD 60I or HD  
30P RECORDING.  
HD 50I/25P!  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED  
BACK.USE DISC WITH DVCAM 525/  
60 RECORDING.  
a)  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED BACK.  
USE DISC WITH HD 60I or HD 30P  
RECORDING.  
HD 23P Disc  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED  
BACK.USE DISC WITH HD 50I or HD  
25P RECORDING.  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED  
BACK.USE DISC WITH DVCAM 525/  
60 RECORDING.  
DISC CANNOT BE PLAYED  
BACK.USE DISC WITH DVCAM 625/  
50 RECORDING.  
Disc Error!  
DISC ERROR DETECTED.  
Use another disc.  
a) Displayed only when DISPLAY CONTROL >ALARM is set to “ON” or  
“LIMITED”.  
During thumbnail search, scene selection, and clip list operations  
Alarm message in monitor Description/action  
video section  
CANNOT EXPAND CLIP  
ANY FURTHER.  
The clip cannot be expanded into more blocks.  
This appears when the EXPAND button is pressed when the number of block is maximum, or  
when the duration of an expanded thumbnail is 1 frame.  
SELECTED ESSENCE  
MARK  
DOES NOT EXIST.  
The selected essence mark does not exist.  
This appears in the essence mark selection screen when the specified essence mark does not  
exist on the disc.  
SUB CLIP IS INVALID.  
SET APPROPRIATE  
IN/OUT POINTS.  
The temporal relationship between the specified In and Out points in a TRIM operation (see  
page 58) is not correct.  
Reset so that the value of the Out point timecode is larger than the value of the In point  
timecode.  
83  
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Alarm message in monitor Description/action  
video section  
DURATION OF ONE  
CLIP LIST MUST BE  
LESS THAN 24 HOURS.  
The total duration of the current clip list is greater than 24 hours.  
This appears when the total duration of the current clip list exceeds the upper limit of 24 hours as  
the result of a sub clip ADD operation or a TRIM operation (see page 58).  
NO MORE SUB CLIPS  
CAN BE ADDED TO  
THE CLIP LIST.  
The upper limit of sub clips in the current clip list has been exceeded.  
This appears when the upper limit of 300 clips in a clip list has been exceed as the result of a  
sub clip ADD operation. (see page 58).  
SUB CLIP DOES NOT  
EXIST.  
There are no sub clips in the current clip list.  
This appears when an attempt is made to execute a MOVE, TRIM, DELETE, or TC PRESET  
operation (see page 58) with no sub clips in the current clip list.  
CLIP LIST DOES NOT  
EXIST.  
There are no clip lists on the disc.  
This appears when an attempt is made to execute a DELETE CLIP LIST operation (see page  
58) when there are no clip lists on the disc.  
MOVE IS INVALID.  
REC INHI!  
The sub clip cannot be moved.  
This appear hen an attempt is made to execute a MOVE operation (see page 58) when there are  
no sub clip in the current clip list, or when there is only 1.  
The disc is write protected.  
This appears when an attempt is made to execute an operation that requires recording while the  
disc is write protected.  
DISC FULL!  
The disc is full.  
This appears when an attempt is made to execute an operation that requires recording while the  
disc is full.  
SHOT MARK DOES NOT  
EXIST.  
The specified shot mark has not been recorded.  
This appears when an attempt is made to execute a DELETE SHOT MARK operation on a clip  
when the specified shot mark has not been recorded for that clip.  
REC START CANNOT  
BE DELETED.  
REC START cannot be deleted.  
This appears when an attempt is made to delete a REC START with a DELETE SHOT MARK  
operation. DELETE SHOT MARK can delete only SHOT MARK1 and SHOT MARK2 marks.  
CLIP IS LOCKED.  
The clip is locked.  
This appears when an attempt is made to delete a clip, set the clip thumbnail, or delete a shot  
mark when the clip is locked.  
ALL CLIPS ARE LOCKED.  
All clips are locked.  
This appears when an attempt is made to execute a LOCK ALL CLIPS operation when all clips  
are already locked.  
ALL CLIPS ARE  
UNLOCKED.  
All clips are unlocked.  
This appears when an attempt is made to execute an UNLOCK ALL CLIPS operation when all  
clips are already unlocked.  
Alarms relating to audio and video signals  
Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Action  
a)  
INPUT VIDEO IS NOT DETECTED.  
CHECK THE VIDEO INPUT MODE AND  
SUPPLY A VIDEO SIGNAL TO VIDEO  
INPUT.  
• Check the setting of V INPUT on the HOME page of  
the function menu (see page 65).  
• Input an HDSDI signal.  
No INPUT!  
a)  
INPUT AUDIO EMPHASIS IS NOT  
SUPPORTED.  
Check the emphasis of the audio input signal.  
EMPHASIS!  
CHECK THE EMPHASIS OF THE AUDIO  
INPUT SIGNAL.  
a) Displayed only when DISPLAY CONTROL >ALARM is set to “ON”.  
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Alarms relating to sensors and drives  
Alarm message in time  
data display section  
Alarm message in monitor video  
section  
Description/action  
FAN Stopped  
DR-FAN Stop  
High TEMP!  
FAN MOTOR STOPPED.  
DRIVE FAN MOTOR STOPPED.  
HIGH TEMPERATURE.  
HIGH TEMPERATURE IN DRIVE.  
Contact your Sony dealer.  
Note  
The unit will not stop operating, but if you continue to  
use it in this state temperatures inside the unit or the  
drive will rise, possibly resulting in failure or fire.  
Error Messages  
About i.LINK  
Error codes appear in the time data display when an error  
(usually a hardware problem) occurs. In addition, both  
error messages and error codes appear in the monitor video  
section and on the video monitor connected to the unit.  
When an error message appears, follow the instructions in  
the error message to resolve the problem.  
This section explains the specifications and features of  
i.LINK.  
What is i.LINK?  
i.LINK is a digital serial interface designed to integrate  
devices equipped with i.LINK connectors. i.LINK allows  
your device to:  
Error code  
- Perform two-way transmission and reception of data  
such as digital audio and digital video signals.  
- Control other i.LINK devices.  
Error code in time data display section  
- Easily connect multiple devices with a single i.LINK  
cable.  
ERROR  
AN ERROR HAS BEEN  
DETECTED. INFORM SERVICE  
OF FOLLOWING CODE:  
Your i.LINK device is capable of connecting to a wide  
range of digital AV devices for data transfer and other  
operations.  
Other advantages include the following feature. When  
connected to multiple i.LINK devices, your i.LINK device  
can perform data transfer and other operations not only  
with the directly connected devices but also with any of the  
devices that are connected to those devices. Therefore, you  
do not need to be concerned with device connection order.  
However, depending on the features and specifications of  
the connected devices, you may need to use certain  
functions differently, and you may not be able to transfer  
data or perform certain operations.  
50-010  
PRESS EJECT KEY  
TO EJECT DISC.  
Error code in monitor video section  
To Eject Discs With the Unit  
Powered Off  
i.LINK, a nickname for IEEE 1394 proposed by Sony, is a  
trademark supported by many companies worldwide.  
IEEE 1394 is an international standard defined by IEEE,  
the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.  
As an emergency measure, disc cartridges can be removed  
with the unit powered off. This operation should always be  
done by a trained service technician.  
Note  
The unit can be connected to one device with the i.LINK  
cable (DV cable). When you connect with a device that has  
two or more i.LINK connectors, refer to the operating  
instructions supplied with the connected device.  
85  
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About data transfer speed of i.LINK  
i.LINK defines maximum data transfer speeds of  
approximately 100, 200 and 400 Mbps that are referred  
Specifications  
1)  
to as S100, S200 and S400 respectively.  
The maximum data transfer speed that an i.LINK device  
supports is identified on the specifications page of the  
operating instructions supplied with the device or near its  
i.LINK connector.  
When you connect a device that supports different data  
transfer speeds, the actual data transfer speeds may be  
different from those indicated on the i.LINK connectors.  
General  
External dimensions (w/h/d, excluding projections)  
307 × 100 × 411 mm  
1
1
(12 / × 4 × 16 / inches)  
8
4
1) What is Mbps?  
Megabits per second. A measure of the rate at which data  
is transmitted per second. In case of 100 Mbps, 100  
Megabits of data can be transmitted per second.  
i.LINK operation with this unit  
For details on operation when other equipment with an  
i.LINK (DV) connector is connected, see Chapter 2 (page  
22).  
For details on connection with an i.LINK cable and the  
necessary software, refer to the operating instructions  
supplied with the connected device.  
Use Sony i.LINK cables  
1
307(12 /8)  
Use Sony i.LINK cables to connect the i.LINK devices.  
6 pins y 4 pins (For DV dubbing)  
6 pins y 6 pins (For DV dubbing)  
in mm (inches)  
Mass  
Power requirements  
100 V to 240 V AC, 50/60 Hz  
7.2 kg (15 lb 13 oz)  
i.LINK and are trademarks.  
200 V to 240 V AC, 50/60 Hz (For  
customers in Europe)  
Power consumption  
0.79-0.33 A  
Operating temperature  
5ºC to 40ºC (41ºF to 104ºF)  
Storage and transport temperature  
–20ºC to +60ºC (–4ºF to +140ºF)  
Operating relative humidity (no condensation allowed)  
25% to 80% (RH)  
Storage and transport relative humidity (no condensation  
allowed)  
20% to 90%  
System  
Recording format  
Video  
Proxy video  
Audio  
MPEG HD: HQ35/SP25/LP18 Mbps  
MPEG-4  
MPEG HD: 16 bits, 48 kHz, 4/2 channels  
A-law 8 bits, 8 kHz, 4 channels  
1)  
Proxy audio  
Playback format  
Video  
MPEG HD: HQ35/SP25/LP18 Mbps  
DVCAM: 25 Mbps  
1)  
Proxy video  
MPEG-4  
86  
Specifications  
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Audio  
MPEG HD: 16 bits/48 kHz, 4/2 channels  
DVCAM: 16 bits/48 kHz, 4 channels  
A-law 8 bits, 8 kHz, 4 channels  
Input connectors  
Digital video inputs  
HDSDI INPUT  
Proxy audio  
1) The MPEG-4 Codec is a product of Ingenient Technologies, Inc.  
BNC type (×1), complying with SMPTE  
292M  
Recording/Playback time (when PFD23 is used)  
MPEG HD  
SDSDI INPUT (with PDBK-104 option board installed)  
BNC type (×1), complying with SMPTE  
Mode  
HQ mode (VBR 35 65 minutes or  
Mbps) more  
SP mode (CBR 25 Approx. 85  
Mbps) minutes  
LP mode (VBR 18 112 minutes or  
Mbps) more  
4-channel audio 2-channel audio  
259M  
i.LINK (HDV 1080i) (with PDBK-102 option board  
68 minutes or  
more  
installed)  
6-pin type (×1), complying with IEEE  
1394  
Approx. 90  
minutes  
122 minutes or  
more  
Analog video inputs  
REF VIDEO INPUT  
BNC type (×2, loop-through)  
HD Tri-level sync or SD composite sync  
(0.3 Vp-p/75Ω/sync negative)  
COMPOSITE VIDEO INPUT (with PDBK-104 option  
board installed)  
BNC type (×1)  
HD COMPONENT VIDEO INPUT (with PDBK-103  
option board installed)  
DVCAM (playback only)  
85 minutes  
Search speed  
Jog mode  
–1 to +2 times normal speed  
Variable-speed mode  
–1 to +2 times normal speed  
Shuttle mode –20 to +20 times normal speed  
Fast forward mode  
+20 times normal speed  
Fast reverse mode  
BNC type (×4)  
Analog audio inputs  
AUDIO INPUT 1/3, 2/4  
–20 times normal speed  
XLR 3-pin, female (×2), +4/0/–3/–6 dBu  
(selectable), 10 kΩ, balanced  
Video performance  
Sampling frequency  
Digital audio inputs  
DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/EBU) INPUT  
BNC type (×2), 1/2ch, 3/4ch complying  
with AES-3id-1995  
Y: 74.25 MHz, R–Y/B–Y: 37.125 MHz  
Quantization  
8 bits/sample  
Compression MPEG-2 MP@HL  
Timecode input  
TIME CODE IN  
Composite output (DV)  
Frequency response  
BNC type (×1), SMPTE timecode, 0.5 to  
18 Vp-p, 3.3 kΩ, unbalanced  
50I: 0 to 4.8 MHz +1.0/–3.0 dB  
60I: 0 to 4.2 MHz +1.0/–3.0 dB  
53 dB or more  
S/N (Y)  
Y/C delay  
K-factor (K2T) 2% or less  
25 ns or less  
Output connectors  
Digital video outputs  
HDSDI OUTPUT  
BNC type (×2), complying with SMPTE  
292M  
SDSDI OUTPUT  
Audio performance  
Sampling frequency  
48 kHz  
Quantization  
Headroom  
16 bits/2 channels or 16 bits/4 channels  
20/18/16/12 dB (selectable)  
BNC type (×1), complying with SMPTE  
259M  
Frequency response  
20 Hz to 20 kHz +0.5/–1.0 dB (0 dB at  
i.LINK (HDV 1080i) (with PDBK-102 option board  
installed)  
1 kHz)  
6-pin type, complying with IEEE 1394  
Dynamic range 90 dB or more  
Analog video outputs  
COMPOSITE OUT  
Distortion  
0.05% or less (at 1 kHz)  
BNC type (×1), 1.0 Vp-p, 75 Ω, sync  
negative  
87  
Specifications  
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Phono jack (×1), 1.0 Vp-p, 75 Ω, sync  
• For the customers in the United Kingdom  
Part number 1-777-823-12 (250 V, 10 A, about 2.0 m)  
• For the customers in European countries other than the  
United Kingdom  
negative  
MONITOR OUT  
D-sub 15-pin (RGB or YPbPr)  
Part number 1-551-631-15 (250 V, 10 A, about 2.0 m)  
Analog audio outputs  
AUDIO OUTPUT 1/3, 2/4  
Protocol Manual (part number 9-968-084-0X)  
PDBK-101 Network Board  
PDBK-102 MPEG-TS Input/Output Board  
PDBK-103 Analog HD Input Board  
PDBK-104 SD Input Upconverter Board  
XLR 3-pin, male (×2), +4/0/–3/–6 dBu  
(selectable), 600 Ω, balanced  
AUDIO MONITOR  
Phono jack (×2) –to +1 dBu/  
47 kΩ/unbalanced (L, R, L+R)  
Stereo phone jack (×1), –to –14 dBu,  
8 Ω, unbalanced  
PHONES  
Medical Specifications  
Protection against electric shock:  
Class I  
Protection against harmful ingress of  
water:  
Digital audio outputs  
DIGITAL AUDIO (AES/EBU) OUTPUT  
BNC type (×2), 1/2 ch, 3/4 ch complying  
with AES-3id-1995  
Ordinary  
Degree of safety in the presence of a  
flammable anesthetic mixture with air  
or with oxygen or nitrous oxide:  
Not suitable for use in the presence of  
a flammable anesthetic mixture with  
air or with oxygen or nitrous oxide  
Mode of operation:  
Timecode output  
TIME CODE OUT  
BNC type (×1), SMPTE timecode, 2.2  
Vp-p 3 dB, 600 Ω, unbalanced  
Remote control connectors  
REMOTE(9P) D-sub 9-pin, female (×1), complying  
with RS-422A  
Continuous  
RS232C  
S400  
CONTROL  
D-sub 9-pin, male (×1)  
6-pin (×1), complying with IEEE 1394  
Minijack 4-pole (×1), for connection of  
RM-LG2  
Design and specifications are subject to change without  
notice.  
Network (with PDBK-101 option board installed)  
RJ-45 type (×1)  
Notes  
• Always make a test recording, and verify that it was  
recorded successfully.  
1000Base-T: complying with IEEE  
802.3ab  
SONY WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR DAMAGES  
OF ANY KIND INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED  
TO, COMPENSATION OR REIMBURSEMENT  
ON ACCOUNT OF FAILURE OF THIS UNIT OR  
ITS RECORDING MEDIA, EXTERNAL  
STORAGE SYSTEMS OR ANY OTHER MEDIA  
OR STORAGE SYSTEMS TO RECORD  
CONTENT OF ANY TYPE.  
• Always verify that the unit is operating properly  
before use. SONY WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR  
DAMAGES OF ANY KIND INCLUDING, BUT  
NOT LIMITED TO, COMPENSATION OR  
REIMBURSEMENT ON ACCOUNT OF THE  
LOSS OF PRESENT OR PROSPECTIVE PROFITS  
DUE TO FAILURE OF THIS UNIT, EITHER  
DURING THE WARRANTY PERIOD OR AFTER  
EXPIRATION OF THE WARRANTY, OR FOR  
ANY OTHER REASON WHATSOEVER.  
100Base-TX: complying with IEEE  
802.3u  
10Base-T: complying with IEEE 802.3  
Accessories supplied  
Vertical installation stand (2)  
Instructions for Use  
English version (1)  
Japanese version (1)  
CD-ROM manual (1)  
Infrared remote commander (1)  
Ferrite core (part number 1-500-824-2X) (4)  
PDZ-1 Proxy Browsing Software (1)  
Warranty Booklet (1)  
Accessories not supplied  
AC power cord  
• For the customers in the U.S.A. and Canada  
Part number 1-556-813-31 (125 V, 10 A, about 2.4 m)  
88  
Specifications  
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Using UMID Data  
Metadata is additional information recorded on discs along  
with audio-visual data. It is used to bring greater efficiency  
to the flow of operations from material acquisition through  
editing, and to make it easier to find and reuse material.  
As one of application of metadata, the UMID has been  
internationally standardized.  
What is a UMID?  
A UMID (Unique Material Identifier) is a unique identifier  
for audio-visual material defined by the SMPTE 330M-  
2003 standard.  
A UMID may be either as a 32-byte Basic UMID or an  
Extended UMID, which includes an additional 32 bytes of  
Source Pack to make a total 64 bytes.  
For details, refer to SMPTE 330M.  
Extended UMID (64 bytes)  
Basic UMID (32 bytes)  
Instance  
Source Pack (32 bytes)  
Spatial  
Coordinates  
Time/Date  
8 bytes  
Universal label  
12 bytes  
L
Material Number  
Country Org  
User  
No.  
4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes  
1
16 bytes  
3 bytes  
12 bytes  
A globally unique ID is automatically recorded for every  
clip.  
The Extended UMID is metadata that provides additional  
information such as location, time/date, company ID and  
so on.  
The UMID is applied as follows.  
Material No.  
ID generated when  
shooting  
Source Pack  
Shooting  
information (when,  
where and who)  
Same as the above  
Instance No.  
Same as the above  
Original material: 00 00 00  
Copied material: generation number (1 byte)  
+ random number (2 byte)  
Distinguish between the  
original material and copied  
material  
Material source ID/  
detecting material  
Metadata pack that  
identifies the source of  
material unit by defining the  
when, where and who of  
the material unit with which  
it is associated.  
Using the Extended UMID  
Functions of UMID data  
UMID data enables the following:  
• Addition of a globally unique ID to every clip of audio-  
visual material. The unique ID is used to detect the  
material source and to link it with the original source  
material.  
You have to enter a country code, organization code and  
user code. Set the country code referring to the table in ISO  
3166, and set the organization code and user code  
according to the guidelines of your organization.  
89  
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• Distinguishing between original material and copied  
material. 00 is added to the Instance Number for original  
material.  
About the UMID ownership information  
COUNTRY (country code)  
Set the country code by entering an abbreviated  
alphanumeric string (4-byte alphanumeric string)  
according to the values defined in ISO 3166-1.  
There are about 240 country codes.  
• Recording with UTC time. UTC (coordinated universal  
time) is used when recording the UMID. Use of a  
universal time system enables uniform management of  
source material recorded all over the world.  
• Calculation of date differences. Source material is  
recorded using modified Julian dates (MJD), which  
enables easy calculation of date differences between  
different source material items.  
Find your own country code on the following web page.  
Refer to ISO 3166-1:  
codlstp1/en_listp1.html  
Setting UMID ownership information  
Proceed as follows.  
When the country code is less than 4 bytes, the active part  
of the code occupies the first part of the 4 bytes and the  
remainder must be filled with the space character (20h).  
1
Select METADATA >STORE OWNER in the setup  
menu (page 71).  
Example: Japan  
For Japan, the country code is JP, which is 2 bytes, or JPN,  
which is 3 bytes.  
Thus, enter the following:  
The STORED OWNERSHIP (UMID ownership  
information setting) screen appears.  
JP_ _  
or  
STORED OWNERSHIP  
JPN _  
COUNTRY  
ORGANIZATION  
USER  
_
_
_
where _ represents a space.  
ORGANIZATION (organization code)  
Enter a 4-byte alphanumeric string for the organization  
code.  
SHIFT: ( )( )( )( )KEY  
INC/DEC: JOG DIAL  
TO MENU: MENU KEY  
Notes  
• There are no problems in recording or playing back  
audio-video signals, even if the ORGANIZATION is not  
set.  
• Organization codes must be acquired by applying to the  
SMPTE registration office. When no organization code  
has been acquired, it is forbidden to enter an arbitrary  
string. As a rule, the code “00” must be entered.  
Freelance operators who do not belong to an origination  
should enter “~”.  
COUNTRY: Sets the country code.  
ORGANIZATION: Sets the organization code.  
USER: Sets the user code  
See the next item “About the UMID ownership  
information” for more information about these codes.  
2
3
Set the ownership information using the arrow buttons  
and jog dial.  
USER (user code)  
Arrow buttons: Select the item to set and the  
character input location (it blinks).  
Jog dial: Selects characters to input at the selected  
location.  
Enter a 4-byte alphanumeric string to identify the user.  
The user code is registered with each organization locally.  
It is usually not centrally registered.  
When the user code is less than 4 bytes, enter the user code  
at the beginning of the 4 bytes and fill the remainder of the  
string with the space character (20H).  
RESET button: Deletes all input data.  
To cancel the ownership information setting  
Press the MENU button.  
This user code is determined by the organization. The  
methods used depend on the organization.  
Press the SET button.  
Note  
The message “NOW SAVING...” appears, and the  
ownership information set in step 2 is saved.  
User code cannot be entered when no organization code  
has been entered.  
See “System Menu” (page 67) in Chapter 6 for more  
information about system menu operations.  
90  
Using UMID Data  
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MPEG-4 Visual Patent  
Portfolio License  
This product is licensed under the MPEG-4 Visual Patent  
Portfolio License for the personal and non-commercial use  
of a consumer for (i) encoding video in compliance with  
the MPEG-4 Visual Standard (“MPEG-4 Video”) and/or  
(ii) decoding MPEG-4 Video that was encoded by a  
consumer engaged in a personal and non-commercial  
activity and/or was obtained from a video provider  
licensed by MPEG LA to provide MPEG-4 Video.  
No license is granted or shall be implied for any other use.  
Additional information including that relating to  
promotional, internal and commercial uses and licensing  
may be obtained from MPEG LA, LLC.  
91  
MPEG-4 Visual Patent Portfolio License  
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Sony Corporation  
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