Operating Instructions
Blu-ray Disc PLAYER
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Operating Environment
ꢀꢁꢂꢃꢄꢁꢅꢆꢁꢇꢈ ꢉꢁꢊꢀꢁꢂꢃꢋꢌꢁ ꢍꢋꢂꢁꢎꢊꢄꢌꢁꢍꢊꢂꢁꢏꢐꢂꢑꢃꢁꢂꢃꢄꢁꢅꢆꢁ
ꢊ ꢂꢈꢄꢂꢁ$ꢊ ꢁ"ꢐꢍꢂꢁꢂꢊꢁ ꢌꢄꢒꢁꢂꢃꢄꢁꢇꢈ ꢉꢁꢏ ꢌꢂꢁꢓꢄꢁꢔꢄꢏꢊ!ꢄꢎꢁ
ꢐꢍꢎꢁꢐꢇꢇꢔꢊꢇꢔꢋꢐꢂꢄꢁꢊꢍꢄꢁꢀꢋꢂꢂꢄꢎꢕꢁꢖꢄꢇꢈꢐꢑꢄꢏꢄꢍꢂꢁꢐꢍꢎꢁ
ꢏꢊ ꢍꢂꢋꢍꢉꢁꢊꢀꢁꢐꢍꢁꢅꢆꢁꢇꢈ ꢉꢁꢊꢍꢁꢂꢃꢄꢁꢇꢊ"ꢄꢔꢁꢌ ꢇꢇꢈ$ꢁꢑꢊꢔꢎꢁꢊꢀꢁ
ꢂꢃꢋꢌꢁ ꢍꢋꢂꢁꢌꢃꢊ ꢈꢎꢁꢓꢄꢁꢇꢄꢔꢀꢊꢔꢏꢄꢎꢁꢊꢍꢈ$ꢁꢓ$ꢁꢗ ꢐꢈꢋꢀꢋꢄꢎꢁ
ꢌꢄꢔ!ꢋꢑꢄꢁꢇꢄꢔꢌꢊꢍꢍꢄꢈꢕꢁ ꢀꢁꢑꢊꢍꢍꢄꢑꢂꢄꢎꢁꢂꢊꢁꢐꢍꢁꢅꢆꢁꢊ ꢂꢈꢄꢂꢒꢁꢂꢃꢄꢁ
ꢑ ꢂꢘꢊꢀꢀꢁꢇꢈ ꢉꢁꢑꢐꢍꢁꢑꢐ ꢌꢄꢁꢌꢄ!ꢄꢔꢄꢁꢄꢈꢄꢑꢂꢔꢋꢑꢐꢈꢁꢌꢃꢊꢑꢙꢕꢁꢚꢐꢙꢄꢁ
ꢌ ꢔꢄꢁꢋꢂꢁꢋꢌꢁꢇꢔꢊꢇꢄꢔꢈ$ꢁꢎꢋꢌꢇꢊꢌꢄꢎꢁꢊꢀꢁꢐꢀꢂꢄꢔꢁꢔꢄꢏꢊ!ꢐꢈꢕ
Operating environment temperature and humidity:
+5 °C to +35 °C (+41 °F to +95 °F); less than 85 %RH
(cooling vents not blocked)
Do not install this unit in a poorly ventilated area, or in
locations exposed to high humidity or direct sunlight (or
strong artificial light)
D3-4-2-1-7c*_A1_En
ꢛꢃꢄꢁꢄꢗ ꢋꢇꢏꢄꢍꢂꢁꢌꢃꢊ ꢈꢎꢁꢓꢄꢁꢎꢋꢌꢑꢊꢍꢍꢄꢑꢂꢄꢎꢁꢓ$ꢁꢔꢄꢏꢊ!ꢋꢍꢉꢁ
ꢂꢃꢄꢁꢏꢐꢋꢍꢌꢁꢇꢈ ꢉꢁꢀꢔꢊꢏꢁꢂꢃꢄꢁ"ꢐꢈꢈꢁꢌꢊꢑꢙꢄꢂꢁ"ꢃꢄꢍꢁꢈꢄꢀꢂꢁ
ꢍ ꢌꢄꢎꢁꢀꢊꢔꢁꢐꢁꢈꢊꢍꢉꢁꢇꢄꢔꢋꢊꢎꢁꢊꢀꢁꢂꢋꢏꢄꢁꢜꢀꢊꢔꢁꢄ#ꢐꢏꢇꢈꢄꢒꢁ"ꢃꢄꢍꢁ
ꢊꢍꢁ!ꢐꢑꢐꢂꢋꢊꢍꢝꢕꢁ
ꢁ
ꢁ
ꢀꢁꢂꢃꢂꢄꢂꢄꢂꢅꢆ
ꢇ
ꢈꢉ
CAUTION
The ꢀꢁSTANDBY/ON switch on this unit will not
completely shut off all power from the AC outlet.
Since the power cord serves as the main disconnect
device for the unit, you will need to unplug it from
the AC outlet to shut down all power. Therefore,
make sure the unit has been installed so that the
power cord can be easily unplugged from the AC
outlet in case of an accident. To avoid fire hazard,
the power cord should also be unplugged from the
AC outlet when left unused for a long period of time
This product incorporates copyright protection
technology that is protected by method claims of
certain U.S. patents and other intellectual property
rights owned by Macrovision Corporation and other
rights owners. Use of this copyright protection
technology must be authorized by Macrovision
Corporation, and is intended for home and other
limited viewing uses only unless otherwise authorized
by Macrovision Corporation. Reverse engineering or
disassembly is prohibited.
(for example, when on vacation).
D3-4-2-2-2a_A_En
POWER-CORD CAUTION
Handle the power cord by the plug. Do not pull out the
plug by tugging the cord and never touch the power
cord when your hands are wet as this could cause a
short circuit or electric shock. Do not place the unit, a
piece of furniture, etc., on the power cord, or pinch the
cord. Never make a knot in the cord or tie it with other
cords. The power cords should be routed such that they
are not likely to be stepped on. A damaged power cord
can cause a fire or give you an electrical shock. Check
the power cord once in a while. When you find it
For Australia Model
damaged, ask your nearest PIONEER authorized
service center or your dealer for a replacement. S002*_En
C67-7-3_En
For U.K. model:
Replacement and mounting of an AC plug on the power supply cord of this unit should be performed only by qualified
service personnel.
IMPORTANT: THE MOULDED PLUG
This appliance is supplied with a moulded three pin mains plug for your safety and convenience. A 5 amp fuse is fitted in this plug. Should the
fuse need to be replaced, please ensure that the replacement fuse has a rating of 5 amps and that it is approved by ASTA or BSI to BS1362.
Check for the ASTA mark
or the BSI mark
on the body of the fuse.
If the plug contains a removable fuse cover, you must ensure that it is refitted when the fuse is replaced. If you lose the fuse cover the plug
must not be used until a replacement cover is obtained. A replacement fuse cover can be obtained from your local dealer.
If the fitted moulded plug is unsuitable for your socket outlet, then the fuse shall be removed and the plug cut off and disposed of
safely. There is a danger of severe electrical shock if the cut off plug is inserted into any 13 amp socket.
If a new plug is to be fitted, please observe the wiring code as shown below. If in any doubt, please consult a qualified electrician.
IMPORTANT: The wires in this mains lead are coloured in accordance with the following code:
Blue : Neutral Brown : Live
As the colours of the wires in the mains lead of this appliance may not correspond with the coloured markings identifying the terminals in
your plug, proceed as follows ;
The wire which is coloured BLUE must be connected to the terminal which is marked with the
letter N or coloured BLACK.
The wire which is coloured BROWN must be connected to the terminal which is marked with the
letter L or coloured RED.
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How to replace the fuse: Open the fuse compartment with a screwdriver and replace the fuse.
D3-4-2-1-2-2_B_En
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Information for users on collection and disposal of old equipment and used batteries
Symbol for
equipment
These symbols on the products, packaging, and/or accompanying documents mean
that used electrical and electronic products and batteries should not be mixed with
general household waste.
For proper treatment, recovery and recycling of old products and used batteries,
please take them to applicable collection points in accordance with your national
legislation.
By disposing of these products and batteries correctly, you will help to save valuable
resources and prevent any potential negative effects on human health and the
environment which could otherwise arise from inappropriate waste handling.
Symbol examples
for batteries
For more information about collection and recycling of old products and batteries,
please contact your local municipality, your waste disposal service or the point of sale
where you purchased the items.
These symbols are only valid in the European Union.
For countries outside the European Union:
If you wish to discard these items, please contact your local authorities or dealer and
ask for the correct method of disposal.
Pb
K058a_A1_En
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Playing discs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Part Names and Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
05 Adjusting audio and video
02 Connecting up
06 Advanced settings
Connecting a TV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
About USB (external storage) devices. . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Place of installation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
KURO LINK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
03 Getting Started
Operating the TV with the player’s remote control . . . . 19
04 Playback
Playback functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Playing a specific section within a title or track
repeatedly (A-B Repeat) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Playing repeatedly (Repeat Play) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Playing in random order (Random Play). . . . . . . . . . . 29
About Play Mode types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
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Chapter 1
01
Before you start
• When loading the batteries into the remote control,
set them in the proper direction, as indicated by the
polarity marks ( and ).
What’s in the box
• Remote control x 1
• Do not heat batteries, disassemble them, or throw
them into flames or water.
• Video/audio cable (yellow/white/red plugs) x 1
• AA/R6 dry cell batteries x 2
• Warranty card
• Batteries may have different voltages, even if they look
similar. Do not use different kinds of batteries
together.
• Operating instructions (this document)
• To prevent leakage of battery fluid, remove the
batteries if you do not plan to use the remote control
for a long period of time (1 month or more). If the fluid
should leak, wipe it carefully off the inside of the case,
then insert new batteries. If a battery should leak and
the fluid should get on your skin, flush it off with large
quantities of water.
•
U.K., Australia and New Zealand models: Power cord x 1
Others: Power cord x 2
Putting the batteries in the
remote control
• When disposing of used batteries, please comply with
governmental regulations or environmental public
institution’s rules that apply in your country/area.
1
Open the rear cover.
• WARNING
Do not use or store batteries in direct sunlight or
other excessively hot place, such as inside a car or
near a heater. This can cause batteries to leak,
overheat, explode or catch fire. It can also reduce the
life or performance of batteries.
D3-4-2-3-3_En
Press lightly on this
part and slide into
the direction of the
arrow.
2
Insert the batteries (AA/R6 x 2).
Insert as indicated by the / marks into the battery
compartment.
Insert the negative
() side first.
3
Close the rear cover.
Close securely (a click should be heard).
Caution
• Do not use any batteries other than the ones
specified. Also, do not use a new battery together with
an old one.
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Types of discs/files that can be played
01
Playable discs
Discs with the logo marks below indicated on the disc label, package or jacket can be played.
Application format
Disc type
Logo
CD-DA
1
2
BDAV
DVD-Video
DVD VR
BDMV
DATA-DISC
DTS-CD
BD-ROM
4
3
BD-R
BD
BD-RE
DVD-ROM
DVD
,
3 4,5
DVD-R
4,6
DVD-RW
3,4
DVD+R
4
DVD+RW
CD-DA
(Audio CD)
CD
4
CD-R
4
CD-RW
CD-ROM
1. Including the AVCHD format.
2. Discs on which video, image or audio files are recorded.
3. Including dual-layered discs.
4. Finalize (close) them before playing them on this player.
5. DVD-R for Authoring discs (3.95 and 4.7 GB) cannot be played.
6. Version 1.0 DVD-RW discs cannot be played.
“Blu-ray Disc” and
are trademarks.
is a trademark of DVD Format/Logo Licensing Corporation.
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This player supports BD-ROM Profile 2.
Discs that cannot be played
• HD DVDs
01
BONUSVIEW functions such as playback of
secondary video (Picture-in-Picture) and secondary
audio can be used. The data used with the
BONUSVIEW functions (the secondary video
(Picture-in-Picture) and secondary audio data) may
be stored in the storage. For details on secondary
video and secondary audio playback, refer to the
disc’s instructions.
• DVD Audio discs
• DVD-RAM discs
• SACDs
• Video CDs
• SVCDs
It is possible that some discs other than the ones listed
above may not be playable either.
“BONUSVIEW” is trademark of Blu-ray Disc
Association.
Note
• Some discs cannot be played, even if one of the logo
marks on the previous page is indicated.
BD-LIVE functions such as downloading movie
trailers or additional audio and subtitle languages
and playing on-line games can be enjoyed over the
Internet. The data downloaded with the BD-LIVE
function (trailers, etc.) is stored in the storage. Refer
to the disc’s instructions for details about BD-LIVE
functions.
• To play 8 cm discs, set the disc in the 8 cm disc
depression in the center of the disc tray. No adapter
is necessary. 8 cm BD-ROMs cannot be played.
About audio formats
The following audio formats are supported on this player:
• Dolby TrueHD
• Dolby Digital Plus
• Dolby Digital
• DTS-HD Master Audio
• DTS-HD High Resolution Audio
• DTS Digital Surround
• MPEG
“BD-LIVE” logo is trademark of Blu-ray Disc
Association.
With BD-ROMs, it is possible to use BD-J (Java)
applications to create highly interactive titles, for
example including games.
• MPEG-2 AAC
• Linear PCM
To enjoy the surround sound of Dolby TrueHD, Dolby
Digital Plus, DTS-HD Master Audio and DTS-HD High
Resolution Audio, it is recommended to connect the
player to an AV receiver or amplifier compatible with
these audio formats using an HDMI cable. After loading
a BD containing sound in one of these audio formats,
select the audio format on the menu screen.
See About the audio output settings on page 45 for the
output conditions of the different formats.
Java and all Java-based trademarks and logos are
trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun
Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries.
Manufactured under license from Dolby Laboratories.
Dolby and the double-D symbol are trademarks of Dolby
Laboratories.
The player’s internal storage has a maximum capacity
of roughly 1 GB. Use an external storage connected to
the USB port if you want to store large quantities of
data (page 16). If a message saying there is not
enough storage space appears, erase any
unnecessary data (page 42).
Manufactured under license under U.S. Patent #’s:
5,451,942; 5,956,674; 5,974,380; 5,978,762; 6,226,616;
6,487,535; 7,392,195; 7,272,567; 7,333,929; 7,212,872 &
other U.S. and worldwide patents issued & pending. DTS is
a registered trademark and the DTS logos, Symbol, DTS-HD
and DTS-HD Master Audio | Essential are trademarks of
DTS, Inc. © 1996-2008 DTS, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
• BDs (BDAV) compatible with the formats below can
be played.
Playing BDs
– Blu-ray Disc Recordable (R) Format Version 1
• BDs (BDMV) compatible with the formats below can
be played.
– Blu-ray Disc Rewritable (RE) Format Version 2
– Blu-ray Disc Read-Only (ROM) Format Version 2
– Blu-ray Disc Recordable (R) Format Version 2
– Blu-ray Disc Rewritable (RE) Format Version 3
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It is possible that when loading or ejecting a DualDisc,
the opposite side to that being played will be scratched.
Scratched discs may not be playable.
Playing DVDs
01
For more detailed information on the DualDisc
specification, please refer to the disc manufacturer or
disc retailer.
This label indicates playback compatibility with DVD-RW
discs recorded in VR format (Video Recording format).
However, for discs recorded with a record-only-once
encrypted program, playback can only be achieved using a
CPRM compatible device.
Playing discs created on computers
or BD/DVD recorders
• It may not be possible to play discs recorded using a
computer due to the application settings or
computer’s environment settings. Record discs in a
format playable on this player. For details, contact the
dealer.
The AVCHD is a high definition (HD) digital video camera
recorder format recording high-definition onto certain
media by using highly efficient codec technologies.
• It may not be possible to play discs recorded using a
computer or a BD/DVD recorder, if burn quality is not
good due to characteristics of the disc, scratches, dirt
on the disc, dirt on the recorder’s lens, etc.
“AVCHD” and the “AVCHD” logo are trademarks of
Panasonic Corporation and Sony Corporation.
About region numbers
Blu-ray Disc Player and BD-ROM or DVD-Video discs are
assigned region numbers according to the region in
which they are sold.
Playable files
Video, image and audio files recorded on DVDs and CDs
can be played.
This player’s region numbers are:
Caution
• BD-ROM:
– U.K., Australia and New Zealand models: B
– Others: A
• In DVD, only the one recorded by the ISO 9660 file
system can be played.
• DVD-Video:
– U.K. models: 2
– Australia and New Zealand models: 4
– Others: 3
Discs not including these numbers cannot be played.
Discs playable on this player are as shown below.
• Some files may not be playable.
• For some files, it may not be possible to use certain
functions during playback.
• It may not be possible to play some files, even if they
have the extension of a file playable on this player.
• Files protected by DRM (Digital Rights Management)
cannot be played (not including DivX VOD files).
• BDs:
– U.K., Australia and New Zealand models: B
(including B) and ALL
– Others: A (including A) and ALL
• DVDs:
– U.K. models: 2 (including 2) and ALL
Supported video file formats
• DivX
®
DivX is a digital video format created by DivX, Inc.
This is an official DivX Certified or DivX Ultra Certified
device that plays DivX video.
– Australia and New Zealand models: 4 (including 4)
and ALL
– Others: 3 (including 3) and ALL
Conform to the size under 720 x 576 pixels/720 x 480
pixels.
Playing CDs
DivX files encoded with GMC/Qpel option cannot be
played.
Regarding copy protected CDs: This player is designed to
conform to the specifications of the Audio CD format.
This player does not support the playback or function of
discs that do not conform to these specifications.
Only audio signals with MP3 or Dolby Digital (AC3)
format are output.
Note that files other than the ones containing DivX
video cannot be played, even if they have the
extension “.avi”.
DualDisc playback
A DualDisc is a new two-sided disc, one side of which
contains DVD content — video, audio, etc. — while the
other side contains non-DVD content such as digital
audio material.
The DVD side of a DualDisc can be played on this player
(excluding any DVD-Audio content).
®
DivX is a registered trademark of DivX, Inc., and is
The non-DVD, audio side of the disc is not compatible
with this player.
used under license.
9
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®
– Plays DivX video
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Part Names and
Functions
01
Note
®
• This DivX Certified device must be registered in
order to play DivX Video-on-Demand (VOD) content.
First generate the DivX VOD registration code for your
device and submit it during the registration process.
[Important: DivX VOD content is protected by a DivX
DRM (Digital Rights Management) system that
restricts playback to registered DivX Certified devices.
If you try to play DivX VOD content not authorized for
your device, the message Authorization Error will be
displayed and your content will not play.] Learn more
Remote Control
STANDBY/ON
OPEN/CLOSE
1
15
16
TV CONTROL
INPUT
SELECT
CH
VOL
2
3
AUDIO SUBTITLE ANGLE FL DIMMER
– This player’s DivX VOD registration code can be
checked at Initial Setup Playback DivX
VOD Registration Code (page 39).
4
17
5
6
– The number of views is restricted for some DivX
VOD files. When such files are played on this
player, the remaining number of views is displayed.
Files for which the remaining number of views has
reached 0 cannot be played (Rental Expired is
displayed). Files for which the number of views is
not restricted can be played as many times as you
like (the remaining number of views is not
displayed).
CLEAR
ENTER
SECONDARY
AUDIO
VIDEO
OUTPUT
RESOLUTION
18
VIDEO SELECT PLAY MODE
HOME MEDIA
GALLERY
7
8
19
21
DISPLAY POPUP MENU
MENU
20
22
TOP MENU
TOOLS
9
ENTER
10
11
12
Supported image file formats
HOME
MENU
RETURN
• JPEG
23
PLAY
File format: JFIF Ver. 1.02/Exif Ver. 2.2
Resolution: Up to 4096 x 4096 pixels
Only baseline JPEG files are supported.
PREV
RED
PAUSE
STOP
NEXT
BLUE
GREEN YELLOW
13
14
VIDEO ADJUST
Supported audio file formats
• Windows Media™ Audio 9 (WMA9)
Bit rate: Up to 192 kbps
Sampling frequencies: 22.05 kHz, 32 kHz, 44.1 kHz
and 48 kHz
Windows Media is either a registered trademark or
trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the United States
and/or other countries.
BD PLAYER
This product includes technology owned by Microsoft
Corporation and cannot be used or distributed without
a license from Microsoft Licensing, Inc.
1
STANDBY/ON – Press to turn the power on and
off.
• MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3 (MP3)
Bit rate: Up to 320 kbps
Sampling frequencies: 8 kHz, 11.025 kHz, 12 kHz,
16 kHz, 22.05 kHz, 24 kHz, 32 kHz, 44.1 kHz and 48 kHz
2
3
4
5
TV CONTROL – (page 19)
AUDIO – (page 26)
SUBTITLE – (page 25)
Playable file extensions
• Video files
Number buttons – Use these to select and play the
title/chapter/track you want to view or listen to and to
select items from menus.
.divx and .avi
CLEAR – Press to clear the numeric number, etc.
• Image files
.jpg and .jpeg
ENTER – Press to execute the selected item or enter a
setting that has been changed, etc.
• Audio files
.wma and .mp3
6
SECONDARY AUDIO – (page 26)
SECONDARY VIDEO – (page 26)
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7
8
9
VIDEO SELECT – (page 21)
16 FL DIMMER – When pressed, the brightness of the
player’s front panel display and the status of the
indicators on the player’s front panel changes.
01
HOME MEDIA GALLERY – (page 31)
TOP MENU – Press to display the top menu of the BD-
ROM or DVD-Video.
Indicators
Front
1
Front
panel
buttons
Blu-ray
PQLS
FL OFF
HDMI
panel
display
10 /// – Use to select items, change settings
and move the cursor.
Bright
Medium
Dark
Lit
Lit
Lit
Off
Bright
Bright
Dark
Off
Lit
Lit
Lit
Off
Lit
Lit
Lit
Off
Off
Off
Off
Lit
ENTER – Press to execute the selected item or enter a
setting that has been changed, etc.
11
HOME MENU – (page 36)
Off
12 PLAY – (page 24)
PAUSE – (page 24)
1. This lights when an HDMI-compatible device is connected to an
HDMI OUT terminal (page 13).
STOP – (page 24)
17 ANGLE – (page 25)
PREV/ NEXT – (page 25)
// – (page 25)
// – (page 25)
18 OUTPUT RESOLUTION – (page 21)
19 PLAY MODE – (page 28)
20 POP UP MENU/MENU – Press to display the BD-
13 RED/GREEN/YELLOW/BLUE – Use these to navigate
ROM or DVD-Video menus.
BD-ROM menus.
21 DISPLAY – (page 26)
14 VIDEO ADJUST – (page 34)
15 OPEN/CLOSE – Press to open and close the disc
22
23
TOOLS – (page 20)
tray.
RETURN – Press to return to the previous
screen.
Front Panel
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
1
10 11
1
2
3
STANDBY/ON – Press to turn the power on and
off. When the power is on, the indicator is lit.
4
Remote control sensor – Point the remote control to
this, then operate it within approximately 7 m.
The player may have trouble capturing remote control
signals if there is a fluorescent light nearby. If this
happens, move the player away from the fluorescent
light.
FL OFF indicator – Lights when the player’s front
panel display is turned off pressing FL DIMMER.
/ – Press to skip to the beginning of the
previous title/chapter/track/file. Press and hold to
start reverse scanning (page 25).
5
6
Disc tray
Blu-ray indicator – Lights when the power is turned
on.
/ – Press to skip to the beginning of the next
title/chapter/track/file. Press and hold to start forward
scanning (page 25).
7
OPEN/CLOSE – Press to open and close the disc
– Press during playback to pause. Press again to
tray.
restart playback.
8
9
Front panel display
– Press to stop playback.
PQLS indicator – (page 14)
When the power is on, the above button indicators are
lit.
10 HDMI indicator – (page 13)
11 – Press to start playback.
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Front Panel Display
01
2 3 4
1
HD LAN
24HZ
CONTROL
EXT
50HZ
60HZ
8 7
6
5
1
2
3
– (page 24)
4
5
LAN – (page 17)
– (page 24)
Character display – Displays the title/chapter/track
number, elapsed time, etc.
HD – This lights when an HDMI cable is connected
and video signals are being output with a resolution of
1080/50i, 1080/50p, 720/50p, 1080/24p, 1080/60i,
1080/60p or 720/60p. It also lights when a component
video cable is connected and video signals are being
output with a resolution of 1080/60i or 720/60p.
6
24HZ/50HZ/60HZ – The frequency of the video frame
or field being output lights.
7
8
EXT – (page 16)
CONTROL – (page 14)
Rear Panel
1
2
3
RS-232
C
COMPONENT VIDEO
Y
P
B
PR
DIGITAL
OUT
CONTROL
IN
AC IN
OPTICAL
R
L
USB
AUDIO
OUTPUT
VIDEO
(BD STORAGE)
LAN(100)
HDMI OUT
9
8
7
6
5
4
1
2
AUDIO OUT terminals – (page 16)
5
6
7
8
9
DIGITAL OUT (OPTICAL) terminal – (page 16)
HDMI OUT terminal – (page 15)
VIDEO OUT terminals
VIDEO – (page 16)
COMPONENT VIDEO – (page 16)
USB (BD STORAGE) port – (page 16)
LAN (100) terminal – (page 17)
3
4
AC IN – (page 17)
RS-232C terminal – This terminal is not used.
CONTROL IN terminal – Use to control this player
from the remote sensor of another Pioneer
component with a CONTROL OUT terminal and
bearing the mark. Connect the CONTROL OUT
terminal of the other component to CONTROL IN on
this player using a mini-plug cord (commercially
available).
Caution
• Be sure to connect cables for outputting the audio
and video signals.
• When connected via System Control, point the
remote control toward the connected component
(such as an AV receiver or amplifier). The remote will
not work correctly when pointed at this player.
• You cannot use System Control with components that
do not have a System Control terminal or with
components manufactured by companies other than
Pioneer.
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Chapter 2
02
Connecting up
Be sure to turn off the power and unplug the power cord
from the power outlet whenever making or changing
connections.
capabilities, allowing natural colors to be reproduced
more faithfully than ever.
“x.v.Color” is a promotion name given to the products that
have the capability to realize a wide-gamut color space
based on the international standard specifications
defined as xvYCC.
After connecting, make the settings at the Setup
Navigator menu according to the type of cable
connected (page 18).
Also refer to the operating instructions of the device
being connected.
Connecting using an
HDMI cable
The audio and video signals can be transferred to HDMI-
compatible devices as digital signals with no loss of
sound or video quality.
“x.v.Color”,
and
are
trademarks of Sony Corporation.
Audio signals that can be
Note
transferred with the player’s HDMI
OUT terminal
• Dolby TrueHD
• Make the settings at the Setup Navigator menu
according to connected HDMI-compatible device
(page 18).
• The HDMI indicator on the player’s front panel lights
when an HDMI-compatible device is connected to an
HDMI OUT terminal (page 11).
• Dolby Digital Plus
• Dolby Digital
• DTS-HD Master Audio
• DTS-HD High Resolution Audio
• DTS Digital Surround
• MPEG-2 AAC
• 1080p video signals may not be output, depending on
the HDMI cable being used.
About HDMI
This player incorporates High-Definition Multimedia
• Linear PCM
Linear PCM audio signals meeting the following
conditions can be output:
Interface (HDMI™) technology.
– Sampling frequency: 32 kHz to 192 kHz
– Number of channels: Up to 8 (up to 6 for a 192 kHz
sampling frequency)
For details, see About the audio output settings on
page 45.
HDMI, the HDMI Logo and High-Definition Multimedia
Interface are trademarks or registered trademarks of HDMI
Licensing, LLC.
About the HDMI High Speed
Transmission
The player supports Deep Color.
This player outputs 1080/50p, 1080/60p and Deep Color
video signals. If your TV supports 1080/50p, 1080/60p or
Deep Color signals, use a High Speed HDMI™ cable in
order to take advantage of the maximum performance the
player and TV can offer. Also set HDMI High Speed
Transmission to On (page 38).
The conventional players can transmit a video signal with
8 bit color depth in the YCbCr 4:4:4 or RGB formats, the
players supporting Deep Color can transmit a video
signal with a color bit depth of greater than 8 bits per
color component. Subtle color gradations can be
reproduced when connected to a TV that supports Deep
Color.
High Speed HDMI™ cables are tested to carry signals up
to 1080p. 1080/50i, 1080/50p, 720/50p, 1080/24p, 1080/60i,
1080/60p and 720/60p video signals that are capable of
Deep Color can also be carried.
This product is compatible with “x.v.Color” that have the
capability to realize a wide-gamut color space based on
the xvYCC specifications.
Playing video signals conforming to “xvYCC” standards
on this player when connected to an “x.v.Color”-
compatible TV, etc., expands color reproduction
13
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Unified language function
02
Note
When the language information from a connected Flat
Screen TV is received, you can have the player’s
on-screen display language change automatically to that
of the Flat Screen TV. This function is available only when
playback is stopped and the menu screen is not
displayed.
• Set HDMI High Speed Transmission to Off when
using an HDMI cable other than a High Speed
HDMI™ cable (a Standard HDMI™ cable).
• The following restrictions apply when HDMI High
Speed Transmission is set to Off:
– Deep Color signals are not output.
Caution
– If the output video resolution is set to Auto, the
signals are output with a resolution of 1080/50i or
1080/60i when TV’s preferred resolution is 1080/50p
or 1080/60p.
• Also refer to the operating instructions of the Flat
Screen TV, AV system (AV receiver or amplifier, etc.)
and HD AV Converter.
– When the output video resolution is set to 576i/480i
or 576p/480p, Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master
Audio audio signals are output as Dolby Digital,
DTS Digital Surround or linear PCM signals. 96 kHz
or 192 kHz multi-channel audio signals are output
as linear PCM 2-channel audio signals (page 45).
Note
• CONTROL on the player’s front panel display lights
when the KURO LINK function is activated (page 12).
To use the KURO LINK function
• The KURO LINK function only works when outputting
• When an HDMI cable with a built-in equalizer is
connected, it may not operate properly.
video signals from the HDMI OUT terminal.
• The KURO LINK function works when KURO LINK is
set to On on the player (page 38).
When connected to a DVI device
• It is not possible to connect DVI devices
(computer displays, for example) that are not
compatible with HDCP. HDCP is a specification to
protect audiovisual content across the DVI/HDMI
interface.
• The KURO LINK function operates when KURO LINK
is set to On for all devices connected with HDMI
cables. Once connections and the settings of all the
devices are finished, be sure to check that the player’s
picture is output to the Flat Screen TV. (Also check
after changing the connected devices and
reconnecting HDMI cables.) The KURO LINK function
may not operate properly if the player’s picture is not
properly output to the Flat Screen TV.
• No audio signals are output. Connect using an audio
cable, etc.
• This player is designed for connection with HDMI-
compatible devices. When connected to a DVI device,
it may not operate properly depending on the DVI
device.
• Use High Speed HDMI™ cables when using the
KURO LINK function. The KURO LINK function may
not operate properly if other HDMI cables are used.
About KURO LINK function
• For some models, the KURO LINK function may be
referred to as “HDMI Control”.
The functions listed below work when a Pioneer KURO
LINK-compatible Flat Screen TV, AV system (AV receiver
or amplifier, etc.) or HD AV Converter is connected to the
player using an HDMI cable.
• The Simultaneous power function is activated when
the player is set as follows (page 38):
Display Power On: On
Display Power Off: On
Functions operated from the TV
Such player operations as starting and stopping playback
and displaying the menus can be performed from the Flat
Screen TV.
About PQLS function
The PQLS (Precision Quartz Lock System) is a transfer
control technology using the KURO LINK function. The
player’s output signals are controlled from the AV
receiver or amplifier to achieve high quality sound
playback using the quartz oscillator of AV receiver or
amplifier. This eliminates the influence of the jitter
generated upon transfer which can adversely affect the
sound quality.
Auto-select function
The input switches automatically on the Flat Screen TV,
AV system (AV receiver or amplifier, etc.) and HD AV
Converter when playback is started on the player or the
Home Menu or Home Media Gallery is displayed. When
the input is switched, the playback picture, the Home
Menu or Home Media Gallery appears on the Flat Screen
TV.
• The player supports the “PQLS 2ch Audio” function
that is only activated when playing audio CDs (CD-
DAs), and the “PQLS Multi Surround” function that is
activated when playing all discs (BDs, DVDs, etc.)
with audio output in linear PCM.
Simultaneous power function
When playback on the player is started or the Home Menu
or Home Media Gallery is displayed, if the Flat Screen TV’s
power was off, its power turns on automatically. When the
Flat Screen TV’s power is turned off, the player’s power
automatically turns off.
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• The “PQLS 2ch Audio” function is only activated when
a Pioneer AV receiver or amplifier compatible with the
“PQLS 2ch Audio” function is connected directly to
the player’s HDMI OUT terminal using an HDMI
cable, and when the player is set as follows (page 38):
KURO LINK: On
Player’s rear panel
02
RS-232
C
COMPONENT VIDEO
Y
P
B
PR
DIGITAL
OUT
CONTROL
IN
OPTICAL
R
L
USB
(BD STORAGE)
AUDIO
OUTPUT
VIDEO
LAN(100)
HDMI OUT
PQLS: Auto
Match the direction of
• The “PQLS Multi Surround” function is only activated
when a Pioneer AV receiver or amplifier compatible
with the “PQLS Multi Surround” function is
connected directly to the player’s HDMI OUT
terminal using an HDMI cable, and when the player is
set as follows (page 38):
the plug to the terminal
and insert straight.
To HDMI
input terminal
It is also possible to connect to an
AV receiver or amplifier using an
HDMI cable (below).
HDMI Audio Out: PCM
KURO LINK: On
Direction of signal flow
TV
PQLS: Auto
• Also refer to the operating instructions of AV receiver
or amplifier.
Connecting an AV receiver or
amplifier
• Please see the Pioneer website for AV receivers or
Connect to an AV receiver or amplifier in order to enjoy
the surround sound of Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus,
Dolby Digital, DTS-HD Master Audio, DTS-HD High
Resolution Audio or DTS Digital Surround. For
instructions on connecting the TV and speakers to the AV
receiver or amplifier, refer to the operating instructions of
AV receiver or amplifier.
amplifiers that support the PQLS function.
Caution
• If the output video resolution is switched, the PQLS
function may not work. The function will work again
once playback has been stopped then restarted.
Note
Caution
• The PQLS indicator on the player’s front panel lights
when the PQLS function is activated (page 12).
• Hold the plug when connecting and disconnecting
the cable.
• Placing a load on the plug could result in faulty
contact and no video signals being output.
About connections to components
of other makes supporting the KURO
LINK function
The functions listed below work when a TV or AV system
(AV receiver or amplifier, etc.) supporting the player’s
KURO LINK function is connected to the player using an
HDMI cable. (Depending on your TV or AV system (AV
receiver or amplifier, etc.), it could happen that not all of
the functions will work.)
Player’s rear panel
RS-232
C
COMPONENT VIDEO
Y
P
B
PR
DIGITAL
OUT
CONTROL
IN
OPTICAL
R
L
USB
(BD STORAGE)
AUDIO
OUTPUT
VIDEO
LAN(100)
HI T
Match the direction
of the plug to the
terminal and insert
straight.
To HDMI
input terminal
• Functions operated from the TV
• Auto-select function
AV receiver
or amplifier
• Simultaneous power function
• Unified language function
From HDMI
To HDMI input
Please see the Pioneer website for the latest information
on brands and model numbers of other brands that
support the KURO LINK function.
output
terminal
TV
terminal
Direction of signal flow
Connecting a TV
See Connecting an AV receiver or amplifier below to
connect an AV receiver or amplifier using an HDMI cable.
Caution
• Hold the plug when connecting and disconnecting
the cable.
• Placing a load on the plug could result in faulty
contact and no video signals being output.
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Connecting an AV receiver or
amplifier using an optical
digital audio cable
Connecting video and
audio cables
02
Note
Player’s rear panel
• Make the settings in the Setup Navigator menu
according to the type of cable connected (page 18).
RS-232
C
COMPONENT VIDEO
Y
P
B
PR
DIGITAL
OUT
CONTROL
IN
• To output video signals from this player, connect
using one of the following (not including when
connected using an HDMI cable): a component video
cable or a video cable.
OPTICAL
R
L
USB
(BD STORAGE)
AUDIO
OUT
VIDEO
LAN(100)
HDMI OUT
Video/audio cable
(included)
Optical digital audio
cable (commercially
available)
Connecting a TV using a
video/audio cable
2-channel analog
audio can also be
connected.
To audio input
terminals
To optical digital
audio input terminal
Caution
AV receiver or
amplifier
Direction of signal flow
• Connect the player’s video output directly to
your TV.
This player supports analog copy protection
technology. Therefore the picture may not be
displayed properly if connected to a TV via a DVD
recorder/video deck or when playing the player’s
output material that is recorded by a DVD recorder/
video deck. Furthermore, the picture may not be
displayed properly due to the copy protection when
the player is connected to a TV with a built-in video
deck. For details, contact the manufacturer of your
TV.
Note
• To switch the video from the AV receiver or amplifier,
also connect the video output terminals.
Connectingcomponents
to the USB port
The data downloaded with the BD-LIVE function and the
data used with the BONUSVIEW function when playing
BD-ROMs can be stored on a device connected to the
USB port (external storage).
Player’s rear panel
COMPONENT VIDEO
Y
P
B
PR
C
IN
Direction of
signal flow
R
L
VIDEO
AUDIO
OUUT
AboutUSB(externalstorage)
devices
The USB (external storage) devices that can be
connected to the player are as shown below.
A component cable or
three commercially
available video cables
can be used instead
of the video cable
(yellow plug) of the
included video/audio
cable for connection.
It is also possible to
connect to an AV
receiver or amplifier.
Connect the audio
signals using an
optical digital audio
cable or an audio cable
(2 channels) (below).
• USB 2.0-compatible memory devices or hard disks
• FAT16 or FAT32 file system, minimum 1 GB capacity
(2 GB or more recommended)
To video/audio
input terminals
Note
To component
video input terminals
• Devices formatted with a file system other than the
above cannot be used. Such devices may however be
usable if they are formatted from the player.
TV
• External storage devices may not be recognized if
they contain multiple partitions.
Note
• Some external storage devices may not operate with
• Video signals are output with a resolution of 576/50i
this player.
or 480/60i when connected using a video cable.
• Operation of external storage devices (USB memory
devices, external hard disks, etc.) is not guaranteed.
• When connected to the TV using a component video
cable, video signals are not output with a resolution of
1080/50i, 1080/50p, 720/50p, 1080/24p or 1080/60p.
• Depending on the output video resolution setting, the
picture may not be output (page 21).
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Connecting the USB
(external storage) device
Connecting via an Ethernet hub
The player can be connected to an Ethernet hub using a
02
LAN cable.
Caution
Player’s rear panel
• Be sure to turn the player’s power off before
connecting or disconnecting external storage
devices.
RS-232
C
COMPONENT VIDEO
Y
P
B
PR
DIGITAL
OUT
C
OPTICAL
R
L
USB
(BD STORAGE)
AUDIO
OUTPUT
VIDEO
• Use empty external storage devices (on which
HDMI OUT
nothing is stored).
• When using an external hard disk as the external
storage device, be sure to turn on the hard disk’s
power before turning on the player’s power.
LAN cable
(commercially
available)
Internet
Modem
Ethernet hub
(router with hub
functionality)
LAN
• If the external storage device is write-protected, be
sure to disable the write-protection.
3
2
1
• When connecting the USB cable, hold onto the plug,
set the plug in the proper direction for the port and
insert it horizontally.
Note
• LAN on the player’s front panel display lights when
there is an active local area network (LAN) connection
(page 12).
• Placing excessive loads on the plug may result in
poor contact, making it impossible to write data on
the external storage device.
• If there is an available DHCP server in your local area
network, the IP address is obtained automatically.
Otherwise, set IP address manually (page 41).
• The player is equipped with an internal storage. This
internal storage cannot be used when an external
storage device is connected.
• For some Internet service providers, you may have to
set the individual network configuration manually. In
this case, see page 41.
• When a USB memory device or external hard disk is
connected and the player’s power is turned on, do not
unplug the power cord.
• Pioneer is not responsible for any malfunction of the
player due to communication error/malfunctions
associated with your network connection and/or your
connected equipment. Please contact your Internet
service provider or network device manufacturer.
Player’s rear panel
RS-232
C
COMPONENT VIDEO
Y
P
B
PR
DIGITAL
OUT
CONTROL
IN
OPTICAL
R
L
(B
AUDIO
OUTPUT
VIDEO
LAN(100)
HD
USB cable
(commercially
available)
Connecting the power
cord
USB memory
device, etc.
Hard disk, etc.
Connect the power cord after all the connections between
Note
devices have been completed.
• The EXT indicator on the player’s front panel display
lights when data can be stored on the external
storage (page 12).
Player’s rear panel
NT VIDEO
P
R
CONTROL
IN
• Devices may not work if connected to the USB port via
a memory card reader or USB hub.
VIDEO
UT
• Use a USB cable with a length of 2 meters or less.
To wall outlet
Power cord (included)
Network connection
BD-LIVE functions such as downloading movie trailers or
additional audio and subtitle languages and playing
on-line games can be enjoyed over the Internet. The
player’s software can also be updated over the Internet
(page 44). Connect an Ethernet hub (or a router with hub
functionality) that is connected to the Internet to the player.
Be sure to use a 100BASE-TX compatible Ethernet hub or
router.
17
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Chapter 3
03
Getting Started
Example (U.K. models):
Making settings using
the Setup Navigator
menu
Setup Navigator
BD PLAYER
Please select the on-screen display language.
Be sure to perform these settings when using the player
for the first time.
Caution
Audio, subtitle and BDMV/DVD-Video menu
language will also be set.
• Before turning on the power, check that the
connections between the player and other devices are
correct. Also, turn on the power of the devices
connected to the player before turning on the player’s
power.
When a Pioneer Flat Screen TV that is compatible with
KURO LINK is connected to this player’s HDMI OUT
terminal, language settings are imported from the
Pioneer Flat Screen TV’s language settings before Setup
Navigator begins.
• When using a Pioneer Flat Screen TV or front
projector compatible with the KURO LINK function,
set KURO LINK to On on the connected device before
turning on the player’s power.
4
Select and set the video and audio output
terminals.
Select the actually connected video and audio output
terminals.
• The screen in step 11 and test tones are output
simultaneously according to the settings in steps 4 to
7. Lower the volume of the devices connected with the
player.
Use /// to select, then press ENTER.
Setting item
Output terminal name
HDMI
HDMI OUT
Note
COMPONENT VIDEO VIDEO OUT
COMPONENT VIDEO
VIDEO
• When a Pioneer Flat Screen TV or front projector
compatible with the KURO LINK function is
connected to the player using an HDMI cable, the
player is automatically set to the optimum picture
quality for the connected device.
VIDEO
HDMI
HDMI OUT
DIGITAL AUDIO
ANALOG AUDIO
DIGITAL OUT
AUDIO OUT
TOP MENU
TOOLS
Caution
• When HDMI is selected for Video, no video signals
are output from the COMPONENT VIDEO or VIDEO
output terminals.
ENTER
HOME
MENU
RETURN
• When COMPONENT VIDEO or VIDEO is selected at
Video, no video signals are output from the HDMI
OUT terminal.
1
Turn on the TV’s power and switch the input.
See the TV’s operating instructions for instructions on
operating the TV.
• The video and audio signals output from the set
output terminals are output synchronously (lip
synchronization).
2
Turn on the player’s power.
Press STANDBY/ON.
• When COMPONENT VIDEO or VIDEO is selected at
Video, no sound is output if HDMI is selected at
Audio.
Follow the procedure below to redo the connections,
then select the proper connection at the setup
screen.
Check that the Setup Navigator menu is displayed.
If the Setup Navigator menu is not
displayed
Press
HOME MENU to display the Home
– When connecting using component video cables
or a video cable to watch the picture, connect to an
AV receiver or amplifier, or a TV using either analog
audio cables, an optical digital audio cable
(page 16).
Menu, select Initial Setup Setup Navigator
Start, then press ENTER.
3
Select the OSD language.
18
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Use / to select, then press ENTER.
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– To listen to audio with the player connected to an
AV receiver or amplifier with an HDMI cable,
connect the TV to the AV receiver or amplifier using
an HDMI cable (page 15).
Depending on the output terminal setting of step 4 or the
HDMI cable being used, it may happen that no picture
and/or sound is output. If this happens, the setup returns
to step 4 if there is no operation for over 30 seconds. Once
the setup returns to step 4, redo the settings according to
the connected devices and the HDMI cable being used.
03
• When HDMI or DIGITAL AUDIO is selected at Audio,
linear PCM audio signals (2 channels) are output
from all terminals other than the ones selected at
Audio.
12 Checking the picture quality settings or setting
the picture quality.
• When ANALOG AUDIO is selected at Audio, no
audio signals are output from the HDMI OUT or
DIGITAL OUT terminals.
If a Pioneer Flat Screen TV or projector is connected to the
player and HDMI is selected for Video in step 4, the
player sets the picture quality automatically. The
automatic picture quality setting screen appears. Press
ENTER.
For steps 5 to 8, the step to which you should
proceed depends on the combination of the Video
and Audio settings.
When the automatic picture quality setting screen does
not appear, the manual picture quality setting screen
appears. Use / to select the connected component,
then press ENTER.
5
Select and set the HDMI High Speed Transmission
setting for the HDMI OUT terminal.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
When HDMI High Speed Transmission for the HDMI
OUT terminal is set to On, use a High Speed HDMI™
cable. The picture and sound may not be output properly
if any other HDMI cable (for example a standard HDMI™
cable) or an HDMI cable with built-in equalizer is used.
Operating the TV with
the player’s remote
control
When the manufacturer code for your brand of TV is set
on the player’s remote control, the TV can be operated
using the player’s remote control.
6
Select the output video resolution from the
COMPONENT VIDEO output terminals.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
For details on the resolution settings, see Switching the
output video resolution on page 21.
Caution
7
Select the aspect ratio of your TV.
• For some models it may not be possible to operate the
TV with the player’s remote control, even for TVs of
brands listed on the manufacturer code list.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
8
Select the PQLS.
• The setting may be restored to the default after the
batteries are replaced. If this happens, reset it.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
STANDBY/ON
OPEN/CLOSE
Note
• Only when a Pioneer AV receiver or amplifier is
TV CONTROL
connected , PQLS Screen appears.
INPUT
SELECT
CH
VOL
• The PQLS function works when linear PCM audio
signals are output. Therefore the linear PCM audio
signals obtained by decoding all audio signals are
output from HDMI OUT terminal. For details, see
About the audio output settings on page 45.
AUDIO SUBTITLE ANGLE FL DIMMER
• When Use is select, the player is set to the settings
below.
CLEAR
AUDIO
ENTER
OUTPUT
RESOLUTION
HDMI Audio Out: PCM
KURO LINK: On
PQLS: Auto
VIDEO
1
Input the 2-digit manufacturer code.
Press the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the code while
pressing TV CONTROL .
• For details on the PQLS function, About PQLS function
on page 14.
9
Check the settings.
Select Proceed, then press ENTER.
Note
10 Output test tones.
• The factory setting is 00 (PIONEER).
Use / to select Yes, then press ENTER.
• If you make a mistake when inputting the code,
release TV CONTROL then start over from the
beginning.
11 Finish the Setup Navigator menu.
Use / to select Finish, then press ENTER.
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• When there are multiple codes for a manufacturer, try
inputting them in the indicated order until the TV can
be operated.
KENDO 42
KENNEDY 32, 42
KORPEL 07
REX 31, 46
03
ROADSTAR 41, 44, 46
SABA 31, 36, 42, 51
SAISHO 39, 44, 46
SALORA 31, 32, 42, 43
SAMBERS 49
KOYODA 44
2
Check that the TV can be operated.
Operate the TV using TV CONTROL.
LEYCO 07, 40, 46, 48
LIESENK&TTER 07
LOEWE 07
SAMSUNG 07, 38, 44, 46, 69, 70
SANYO 35, 45, 48, 21, 14, 91
– Press to turn the TV’s power on and off.
INPUT SELECT – Press to switch the TV’s input.
CH +/– – Press to select the TV channel.
VOL +/– – Press to adjust the volume.
LUXOR 32, 42, 43
M-ELECTRONIC 31, 44, 45, 54, 56, SBR 07, 34
07, 36, 51
SCHAUB LORENZ 42
SCHNEIDER 07, 41, 47
SEG 42, 46
SEI 32, 40, 49
SELECO 31, 42
MAGNADYNE 32, 49
MAGNAFON 49
MAGNAVOX 07, 10, 03, 12, 29
MANESTH 39, 46
MARANTZ 07
TV Preset code list
Manufacturer Code(s)
SHARP 02, 19, 27, 67, 90
SIAREM 32, 49
MARK 07
MATSUI 07, 39, 40, 42, 44, 47, 48 SIEMENS 31
MCMICHAEL 34
MEDIATOR 07
MEMOREX 44
SINUDYNE 32, 39, 40, 49
SKANTIC 43
SOLAVOX 31
SONOKO 07, 44
SONOLOR 31, 35
SONTEC 07
PIONEER 00, 31, 32, 07, 36, 42, 51, ERRES 07
22
FERGUSON 07, 36, 51
FINLANDIA 35, 43, 54
FINLUX 32, 07, 45, 48, 53, 54
FIRSTLINE 40, 44
FISHER 32, 35, 38, 45
FORMENTI 32, 07, 42
FRONTECH 31, 42, 46
FRONTECH/PROTECH 32
FUJITSU 48
ACURA 44
ADMIRAL 31
AIWA 60
AKAI 32, 35, 42
AKURA 41
ALBA 07, 39, 41, 44
AMSTRAD 42, 44, 47
ANITECH 44
ASA 45
METZ 31
MINERVA 31, 53
MITSUBISHI 09, 10, 02, 21, 31
MULTITECH 44, 49
NEC 59
NECKERMANN 31, 07
NEI 07, 42
SONY 04
SOUNDWAVE 07
STANDARD 41, 44
STERN 31
SUSUMU 41
SYSLINE 07
TANDY 31, 41, 48
TASHIKO 34
TATUNG 07, 48
TEC 42
TELEAVIA 36
TELEFUNKEN 36, 37, 52
TELETECH 44
NIKKAI 05, 07, 41, 46, 48
NOBLIKO 49
FUNAI 40, 46, 58
GBC 32, 42
ASUKA 41
NOKIA 32, 42, 52
NORDMENDE 32, 36, 51, 52
OCEANIC 31, 32, 42
ORION 32, 07, 39, 40
OSAKI 41, 46, 48
OSO 41
OSUME 48
OTTO VERSAND 31, 32, 07, 42
PALLADIUM 38
AUDIOGONIC 07, 36
BASIC LINE 41, 44
BAUR 31, 07, 42
BEKO 38
GE 00, 01, 08, 07, 10, 11, 17, 02,
28, 18
GEC 07, 34, 48
GELOSO 32, 44
BEON 07
GENERAL 29
BLAUPUNKT 31
BLUE SKY 41
BLUE STAR 18
BPL 18
GENEXXA 31, 41
GOLDSTAR 10, 23, 21, 02, 07, 50
GOODMANS 07, 39, 47, 48, 56
GORENJE 38
TENSAI 40, 41
THOMSON 36, 51, 52, 63
THORN 31, 07, 42, 45, 48
TOMASHI 18
TOSHIBA 05, 02, 26, 21, 53
TOWADA 42
ULTRAVOX 32, 42, 49
UNIDEN 92
UNIVERSUM 31, 07, 38, 42, 45,
46, 54
VESTEL 07
VICTOR 13
VOXSON 31
WALTHAM 43
WATSON 07
PANAMA 46
BRANDT 36
BTC 41
GPM 41
GRAETZ 31, 42
PANASONIC 31, 07, 08, 42, 22
PATHO CINEMA 42
PAUSA 44
PHILCO 32, 42
PHILIPS 31, 07, 34, 56, 68
PHOENIX 32
PHONOLA 07
PROFEX 42, 44
PROTECH 07, 42, 44, 46, 49
QUELLE 31, 32, 07, 42, 45, 53
R-LINE 07
RADIOLA 07
RADIOSHACK 10, 23, 21, 02
RBM 53
RCA 01, 10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 61, 62, YOKO 07, 42, 46
09
BUSH 07, 41, 42, 44, 47, 56
CASCADE 44
CATHAY 07
CENTURION 07
CGB 42
CIMLINE 44
CLARIVOX 07
CLATRONIC 38
CONDOR 38
CONTEC 44
CROSLEY 32
CROWN 38, 44
CRYSTAL 42
CYBERTRON 41
DAEWOO 07, 44, 56
DAINICHI 41
DANSAI 07
GRANADA 07, 35, 42, 43, 48
GRADIENTE 30, 57
GRANDIN 18
GRUNDIG 31, 53
HANSEATIC 07, 42
HCM 18, 44
HINARI 07, 41, 44
HISAWA 18
HITACHI 31, 33, 34, 36, 42, 43, 54,
06, 10, 24, 25, 18
HUANYU 56
WATT RADIO 32, 42, 49
WHITE WESTINGHOUSE 07
HYPSON 07, 18, 46
ICE 46, 47
IMPERIAL 38, 42
INDIANA 07
ZENITH 03, 20
REDIFFUSION 32, 42
INGELEN 31
INTERFUNK 31, 32, 07, 42
INTERVISION 46, 49
ISUKAI 41
DAYTON 44
DECCA 07, 48
DIXI 07, 44
Using the TOOLS menu
Various functions can be called out according to the
ITC 42
DUMONT 53
ELIN 07
ITT 31, 32, 42
JEC 05
player’s operating status.
ELITE 41
JVC 13, 23
ELTA 44
EMERSON 42
KAISUI 18, 41, 44
KAPSCH 31
TOP MENU
TOOLS
ENTER
HOME
MENU
RETURN
20
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1
Display the TOOLS menu.
Switching the video
output terminal to be
viewed
Use the procedure below to switch the video output signal
to be viewed between the HDMI OUT terminal and an
analog output terminal (COMPONENT VIDEO or VIDEO
output terminals).
03
Press
TOOLS.
BD PLAYER
TOOLS
Angle
Audio
Subtitle
Audio Adjust
Video Adjust
2
Select and set the item.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Caution
Note
• The picture may not be displayed for a while when the
video output terminal is switched.
• Items that cannot be changed are displayed in gray.
The items that can be selected depend on the player’s
status.
• When the HDMI OUT terminal is selected, no video
signals are output from the other video output
terminals.
To change the setting of the
selected item
• When a video output terminal other than the HDMI
OUT terminal is selected, no audio and video signals
are output from the HDMI OUT terminal.
Use / to change.
SECONDARY
AUDIO
VIDEO
OUTPUT
RESOLUTION
To close the TOOLS menu
VIDEO SELECT PLAY MODE
HOME MEDIA
GALLERY
Press
TOOLS or
RETURN.
DISPLAY POPUP MENU
MENU
TOOLS menu item list
TOP MENU
TOOLS
Item
Description
Press VIDEO SELECT.
Play from Beginning Play the selected title, track or file from
• The current video output terminal is displayed on the
TV screen and on the player’s front panel display.
To switch the video output terminals, press /.
the start.
Slideshow
Play a slideshow of the image files on the
selected disc or folder.
Example:
Output video resolution setting of
selected video output terminal
Play Mode
Display the Play Mode screen (page 28).
Video Adjust
Display the picture quality adjustment
screen (page 34).
Video Output Terminal
HDMI (Source Direct)
Secondary Video
Switch the BD-ROM’s secondary video
(Picture-in-Picture) (page 26).
• The video output terminal setting can also be
switched by pressing / on the
player’s front panel.
Subtitle
Angle
Switch the subtitles (page 25).
Switch the BD-ROM/DVD-Video disc’s
camera angles (page 25).
Rotate
Rotate the image while playing a
slideshow (page 32).
Switching the output
video resolution
Audio Adjust
Display the audio adjustment menu
(page 35).
Audio
Switch the audio (page 26).
Use the procedure below to switch the output video
resolution from the various video output terminals.
Secondary Audio
Switch the BD-ROM’s secondary audio
(page 26).
Now Playing
Display the playback screen of the
currently playing track or file.
Caution
• On some devices (TV, AV receiver or amplifier, etc.),
the video or audio may not be output properly when
the resolution is switched. If this happens, use
OUTPUT RESOLUTION to set a resolution at which
the video and audio are properly output.
Original/Play List
Switch the DVD-R/-RW’s (VR format) list
screen between the original list and the
playlist.
Add to HMG Playlist Add the selected track or file to the HMG
Playlist (page 32).
• When video signals are being output with a resolution
of 1080/50i, 1080/50p, 720/50p, 1080/24p, 1080/60i,
1080/60p or 720/60p from the HDMI OUT terminal or
COMPONENT VIDEO output terminals, the picture
may be output with an aspect ratio of 16:9, even if the
TV Aspect Ratio is set to 4:3 (Standard).
Delete from HMG
Playlist
Delete the selected track or file from the
HMG Playlist (page 33).
Output Video
Resolution
Switch the output video resolution from
the various output terminals (page 21).
21
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• The picture may not be displayed for a while when the
resolution is switched.
Eject the disc, then press the OPEN/CLOSE button on
the front panel while pressing the button to switch to a
different frame/field frequency. The frame/field frequency
switches between 50 Hz and 60 Hz each time this
operation is performed. The indicator for the frame
frequency’s current setting lights on the front panel
display (page 12).
03
CLEAR
ENTER
SECONDARY
AUDIO
VIDEO
OUTPUT
RESOLUTION
VIDEO SELECT PLAY MODE
HOME MEDIA
GALLERY
DISPLAY POPUP MENU
MENU
About Film material
The film material is a video signal with a frame rate of 24
frames/second. For example, these materials include
1080/24p, 720/24p, etc.
Press OUTPUT RESOLUTION.
• The current output video resolution setting is
displayed on the TV screen and on the player’s front
panel display.
To switch the output video resolution, press OUTPUT
RESOLUTION again or press /.
To output film material
To output 1080/24p film material from HDMI OUT
terminal, set the output video resolution to either Auto or
Source Direct.
• The output video resolution depends on the video
output terminal (page 23).
Video resolution of the
currently playing disc
Example:
Caution
Auto
Source : 1080/50i
Output Video Resolution
• 1080/24p signals can only be output from the HDMI
OUT terminal. They cannot be output from other
video terminals.
Current Output : 1080/50i
Output video resolution
• When Auto is selected, the picture is output at 60
frames/second if your TV is not compatible with 1080/
24p signals.
from the player
• The output video resolution setting can also be
switched by selecting Output Video Resolution
from the TOOLS menu.
• When Source Direct is selected, the signals are
output as such, even if your TV is not compatible with
1080/24p signals. If the picture is not displayed
properly, use OUTPUT RESOLUTION to set an output
video resolution at which the video and audio signals
are properly output.
About the frame/field frequency
and NTSC/PAL TV systems
U.K., Australia and New Zealand models: By factory default
setting, the frame/field frequency is set for an output of
50 Hz, and the video signal output from the VIDEO output
terminals is set to be output in the PAL TV system format.
When sources with a frame/field frequency of 60 Hz or
24 Hz are played, the output frame/field frequency
automatically switches to 60 Hz (or 24 Hz for HDMI,
depending on the setting), and the TV system format for
the video signal output from the VIDEO output terminals
depends on the NTSC on PAL TV setting.
• Even if Auto or Source Direct is selected, 720/24p
video signals are output at 60 frames/second.
Others: By factory default setting, the frame/field
frequency is set for an output of 60 Hz, and the TV system
format for the video signal output from the VIDEO output
terminals depends on the NTSC on PAL TV setting. When
sources with a frame/field frequency of 50 Hz are played,
the output frame/field frequency automatically switches
to 50 Hz, and the video signal output from the VIDEO
output terminals is set to be output in the PAL TV system
format.
When playback is stopped, the frame/field frequency and
TV system settings remain at the settings last used. The
frame/field frequency and TV system settings do not
change even when the power is turned off. They only
switch when a video material with a different frame/field
frequency is played.
If the picture is not displayed on the TV when a source
with a different frame/field frequency is played, use the
procedure below to switch the frame/field frequency and
TV system settings for the signal output from the player.
22
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About the output video resolution
03
The output video resolution setting and the resolution of the picture that is actually output differ for the different
terminals. See the table below. The table below shows the output video resolution for the different terminals when the
frame/field frequency of the playback source is 50 Hz on the upper line, the resolutions when the source’s frame/field
frequency is 60 Hz and 24 Hz on the lower line.
1
1
Output
video
resolution
setting
HDMI
COMPONENT VIDEO/VIDEO
HDMI OUT terminal COMPONENT
VIDEO/VIDEO
HDMI OUT terminal COMPONENT
VIDEO output
VIDEO
output
(TV
system)
2
2
output terminals
terminals
terminal
3
Resolution preferred No video signals are No video signals are
—
—
—
Auto
4,5,6
output
output
by TV
576i or 480i
576/50i
480/60i
576/50i
480/60i
576/50i
480/60i
PAL
7
576p or 480p 576/50p
576/50p
576/50i
480/60i
PAL
7
480/60p
480/60p
1080i
1080/50i
1080/60i
576/50p
576/50i
480/60i
PAL
8,9
7
1080/60i
—
3
10,11
10,11
—
—
1080p
1080/50p
1080/60p
Source Direct Resolution recorded
Resolution recorded 576/50i
PAL
5,12,13
9,12,13,14
on disc
on disc
7
480/60i
1. The video output terminal set at Video in the Setup Navigator (page 18) or the video output terminal selected with VIDEO SELECT (page 21).
2. Depending on the BD, the pictures may not be output.
3. This cannot be selected when the video output terminal is set to COMPONENT VIDEO/VIDEO.
4. The pictures are output with the preferred output resolution of the device (TV, AV receiver or amplifier, etc.) connected to HDMI OUT
terminal.
5. For details on the output of film material (1080/24p or 720/24p video signals), see To output film material on page 22.
6. Sources with a resolution of 720/50p, 720/60p and 720/24p are output at 1080/50i or 1080/60i even if the TV’s recommended resolution is
1080/50p or 1080/60p.
7. Depends on the NTSC on PAL TV setting (page 37).
8. DVD-Video or DVD-R/-RW (VR format) may be output at 480/60p.
9. BD-ROM or BD-R/-RE may be output at 480/60p.
10. Depending on the connected HDMI cable, the video signals may not be output.
11. Sources with a resolution of 720/50p, 720/60p and 720/24p are output at 1080/50i or 1080/60i.
12. Depending on the connected TV, the video signals may not be output.
13. 720/24p film material is output at 720/60p.
14. 1080/24p film material is output at 1080/60i.
23
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CPhlaapteyr b4 ack
04
Playing discs or files
Note
• Some discs start playing automatically when the disc
tray is closed.
This section describes the player’s main operations.
For the types of discs that can be played, see Playable
discs on page 7. For the types of files that can be played,
see Playable files on page 9. Video, image and audio files
recorded on discs are played with the Home Media
Gallery (page 31).
• DVD-Video discs have parental lock features. Input
the password registered in the player’s settings to
unlock the parental lock. For details, see page 43.
• For some BD-R/-RE, playback protection is set for the
disc or titles. Input the code number set for the disc
to unlock the protection.
STANDBY/ON
OPEN/CLOSE
• Check Troubleshooting on page 55 if video or audio
TV CONTROL
signals are not being output properly.
INPUT
SELECT
CH
VOL
AUDIO SUBTITLE ANGLE FL DIMMER
If the disc menu is displayed
For some discs, the disc menu is displayed automatically
when playback starts. The contents of the disc menu and
the way to operate differ from disc to disc.
Resuming playback from where it
was stopped (resume playback
function)
• When STOP is pressed during playback, the point
at which the disc stopped is stored in the memory.
When PLAY is pressed, playback resumes from
that point.
CLEAR
ENTER
SECONDARY
AUDIO
VIDEO
OUTPUT
RESOLUTION
VIDEO SELECT PLAY MODE
HOME MEDIA
GALLERY
DISPLAY POPUP MENU
MENU
TOP MENU
TOOLS
ENTER
• For audio CDs and audio files, playback starts from
the beginning of the track/file that was playing.
HOME
MENU
RETURN
• If the stop mode was set while playing a slideshow of
image files, playback starts from the image file last
displayed.
PLAY
PREV
RED
PAUSE
GREEN
STOP
BLUE
NEXT
YELLOW
• To cancel the resume playback function, press
STOP while playback is stopped.
1
Press STANDBY/ON to turn on the power.
Turn the TV’s power on and switch its input beforehand.
Note
2
Press OPEN/CLOSE to open the disc tray and
• The resume playback function is canceled
automatically in the following cases:
load the disc.
– When the disc tray is opened.
Note
– When the file list window is switched.
• Load the disc with the printed side facing
– When the power is turned off. (For BDs and DVDs
this does not cancel the resume playback
function.)
up.
• Several dozen seconds are required to read
the disc. Once reading is completed, the
type of disc is displayed on the player’s front
panel display.
• The resume playback function cannot be used for
some discs.
3
Press PLAY to play the disc.
on the player’s front panel display lights during
playback.
• To pause, press PAUSE during playback. on the
player’s front panel display lights when playback is
paused.
24
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• To stop, press STOP during playback.
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Forward and reverse
scanning
Switching the camera angles
For BD-ROM and DVD-Video discs on which multiple
angles are recorded, the angles can be switched during
playback.
04
During playback, press or .
• The scanning speed switches each time the button is
pressed. The speed steps depend on the disc or file
(the speed is displayed on the TV screen).
During playback, press ANGLE.
• The current angle and total number of recorded
angles are displayed on the TV screen and on the
player’s front panel display.
• Forward or reverse scanning is also possible by
holding the button down. Normal playback resumes
when the button is released.
To switch the angles, press ANGLE again or press /
.
Current angle/Total number of
recorded angles
To resume normal playback
Example:
Press PLAY.
ꢀ
1/4
ꢁ
Angle
Playing specific titles,
chapters or tracks
• The angles can also be switched by selecting Angle
from the TOOLS menu.
Input the number of the title, chapter or track you
want to play.
• If the angles are not switched when ANGLE is
• Use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the number,
then press ENTER.
pressed, switch them from the menu screen.
Switching the subtitles
• Press CLEAR to clear the values you have input.
For discs or files on which multiple subtitles are recorded,
the subtitles can be switched during playback.
Skipping content
Press PREV or NEXT.
• When NEXT is pressed, the playback skips
ahead to the beginning of the next title/chapter/track/
file.
Caution
• The subtitles cannot be switched for discs recorded
on a DVD or BD recorder. Also refer to the operating
instructions of the device used for recording.
• When PREV is pressed, the playback skips back
to the beginning of the currently playing title/chapter/
track/file. Press twice to skip back to the beginning of
the previous title/chapter/track/file.
During playback, press SUBTITLE.
• The current subtitle and total number of recorded
subtitles are displayed on the TV screen and on the
player’s front panel display.
To switch the subtitle, press SUBTITLE again or press
/.
Playing in slow motion
While playback is paused, press and hold /
or /.
• The speed switches each time the button is pressed
(the speed is displayed on the TV screen). The speed
steps depend on the disc or file.
Current subtitle/Total number of
recorded subtitles
Example:
1/2 English
Subtitle
To resume normal playback
• The subtitles can also be switched by selecting
Subtitle from the TOOLS menu.
Press PLAY.
• If the subtitles are not switched when SUBTITLE is
pressed, switch them from the menu screen.
Step forward and step
reverse
Turning the subtitles off
While playback is paused, press / or /.
• The picture moves a step forward or reverse each time
the button is pressed.
Press SUBTITLE, then press CLEAR.
About displaying external subtitle
files while playing DivX media files
In addition to the subtitles recorded in DivX media files,
this player also supports the display of external subtitle
files. If a file has the same name as a DivX media file aside
from the file extension and the extension is one of the
extensions listed below, the file is treated as an external
subtitle file. Note that DivX media files and external
To resume normal playback
Press PLAY.
25
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subtitle files must be located in the same folder.
Only one external subtitle file can be displayed on this
player. Use a computer, etc., to delete any external
subtitle files you do not want to display from the disc.
• If the audio/secondary audio is not switched when
AUDIO/SECONDARY AUDIO is pressed, switch it
from the menu screen.
04
Turning the Secondary Audio off
.srt, .sub, .txt, .smi, .ssa, .ass
Press SECONDARY AUDIO, then press CLEAR.
If the language code is specified for the external subtitle
file, the subtitles are displayed with the font
corresponding to that language code. If no language
code is specified, the subtitles are displayed with the font
corresponding to the language code set at Subtitle
Language (page 39). The same font is used for the all the
languages in each of the groups below.
Switching the secondary
video
Use the procedure below to switch the secondary video
(Picture-in-Picture) recorded on the BD-ROM.
During playback, press SECONDARY VIDEO.
• The current secondary video and total number of
recorded secondary video streams are displayed on
the TV screen and on the player’s front panel display.
To switch the secondary video, press SECONDARY
VIDEO again or press /.
Group 1 Afrikaans(af/afr), Basque(eu/eus), Catalan(ca/cat),
Danish(da/dan), Dutch(nl/nld), English(en/eng),
Faroese(fo/fao), Finnish(fi/fin), French(fr/fra), Galician(gl/
glg), German(de/deu), Guarani(gn/grn), Icelandic(is/isl),
Irish(ga/gle), Italian(it/ita), Latin(la/lat), Norwegian(no/
nor), Portuguese(pt/por), Rhaeto-Romance(rm/roh),
Scots-Gaelic(gd/gla), Spanish(es/spa), Swahili(sw/swa),
Swedish(sv/swe), Zulu(zu/zul)
Current secondary video/Total number of
recorded secondary video streams
Example:
Group 2 Albanian(sq/sqi), Croatian(hr/hrv), Czech(cs/ces),
Hungarian(hu/hun), Polish(pl/pol), Romanian(ro/ron),
Slovak(sk/slk), Slovenian(sl/slv)
ꢀ
Secondary Video
Group 3 Belarusian(be/bel), Bulgarian(bg/bul), Macedonian(mk/
mkd), Moldavian(mo/mol), Russian(ru/rus), Serbian(sr/
srp), Ukrainian(uk/ukr)
1/4
ꢁ
• The secondary video can also be switched by
selecting Secondary Video from the TOOLS menu.
Group 4 Greek(el/ell)
Group 5 Estonian(et/est), Kurdish(ku/kur), Turkish(tr/tur)
• If the secondary video is not switched when
SECONDARY VIDEO is pressed, switch it from the
menu screen.
Note
• Depending on the file, the external subtitles may not
be displayed properly.
Turning the Secondary Video off
Press SECONDARY VIDEO, then press CLEAR.
Switching the audio and
secondary audio
For discs or files on which multiple audio streams/
channels are recorded, audio streams/channels can be
switched during playback. Also use this procedure to
switch the secondary audio for BD-ROMs on which
secondary audio is recorded.
Displaying the disc
information
Press DISPLAY.
The disc information appears on the TV screen. The
information switches each time the button is pressed.
The information display differs during playback and when
playback is stopped.
During playback, press AUDIO.
• The current audio and total number of recorded audio
streams are displayed on the TV screen and on the
player’s front panel display.
To switch the audio, press AUDIO again or press /
.
• To switch the secondary audio, press SECONDARY
AUDIO.
Current audio/Total number of
recorded audio streams
Example:
ꢀ
Audio
2/2 English
Dolby True HD
96kHz 7.1ch L C R Ls Rs Lb Rb LFE
ꢁ
Number of
channels
Channels recorded
on disc
Audio type
• The audio/secondary audio can also be switched by
selecting Audio or Secondary Audio from the
TOOLS menu.
26
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Playback functions
04
The functions that can be used differ according to the type of disc and file. In some cases, some of the functions cannot
be used. Check the usable functions on the table below.
Disc/file type
DVD-R
/-RW
(VR
1
Function
BD-
ROM
BD-R
/-RE
DVD-
Video
Video
file
Image Audio Audio
AVCHD
file
file
CD
format)
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
Forward and reverse scanning
Playing specific titles, chapters or tracks
Skipping content
2,5
6
Playing in slow motion
2
7
Step forward and step reverse
8
Switching the camera angles
9
Switching the subtitles
10
Switching the audio
11
12
Switching the secondary audio
13
14
Switching the secondary video
Displaying the disc information
1. Some functions may not work for some discs or files, even if indicated [] on the table.
2. For some discs, normal playback resumes automatically when the chapter switches.
3. No sound is produced during forward and reverse scanning.
4. Sound is produced during forward and reverse scanning.
5. • No sound is output during slow motion playback.
• It is not possible to switch the speed during reverse slow motion playback.
6. Reverse slow motion playback is not possible.
7. Reverse step playback is not possible.
8. Angle mark
is displayed for scenes at which multiple angles are recorded if Angle/Secondary Indicator is set to On (page 39).
9. • The types of recorded subtitles depend on the disc and file.
• In some cases the subtitle may switch or the switching screen provided on the disc may be displayed immediately, without the current
subtitle or the total number of subtitles recorded on the disc being displayed.
10. The types of recorded audio streams depend on the disc and file.
11. • The types of recorded secondary audio streams depend on the disc and file.
• In some cases the secondary audio may switch or the switching screen provided on the disc may be displayed immediately, without the
current secondary audio or the total number of secondary audio streams recorded on the disc being displayed.
• Secondary audio mark
is displayed for scenes at which secondary audio is recorded if Angle/Secondary Indicator is set to On
(page 39).
12. Some discs do not include secondary audio.
13. • In some cases the secondary video may switch or the switching screen provided on the disc may be displayed immediately, without the
current secondary video or the total number of secondary video streams recorded on the disc being displayed.
• Secondary video mark
is displayed for scenes at which secondary video is recorded if Angle/Secondary Indicator is set to On
(page 39).
14. Some discs do not include secondary video.
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Playing a specific title,
chapter or track (Search)
Using the Play Mode
functions
04
1
Press PLAY MODE to display the Play Mode
screen.
The Play Mode screen can also be displayed by selecting
Play Mode from the TOOLS menu.
2
Select the type of search.
CLEAR
ENTER
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
SECONDARY
AUDIO
VIDEO
OUTPUT
RESOLUTION
See the table on page 30 for the search types.
VIDEO SELECT PLAY MODE
HOME MEDIA
GALLERY
3
Input the number.
DISPLAY POPUP MENU
MENU
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the
number.
TOP MENU
TOOLS
Use / to move the cursor.
ENTER
• To search for title 32, input 0, 3 and 2, then press
ENTER.
HOME
MENU
RETURN
• Press CLEAR to clear the values you have input.
PLAY
PREV
PAUSE
STOP
NEXT
Title
Title Search
0
3
2
Search
Playing from a specific time
(Time Search)
4
Starting playback from the specified title, chapter
or track.
Use / to select Search, then press ENTER.
1
During playback, press PLAY MODE to display the
Playing a specific section
within a title or track
repeatedly (A-B Repeat)
Use this procedure to play a specific section within a title
or track repeatedly.
Play Mode screen.
The Play Mode screen can also be displayed by selecting
Play Mode from the TOOLS menu.
2
Select Time Search.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Input the time.
1
During playback, press PLAY MODE to display the
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the time.
Play Mode screen.
The Play Mode screen can also be displayed by selecting
Play Mode from the TOOLS menu.
Use / to move the cursor.
• To play from 45 minutes, input 0, 0, 4, 5, 0 and 0, then
press ENTER.
2
Select A-B Repeat.
• To play from 1 hour 20 minutes, input 0, 1, 2, 0, 0 and
0, then press ENTER.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select the starting point for A-B Repeat.
• Press CLEAR to clear the values you have input.
Use / to select A (Start), then press ENTER.
Time Search
1
2
:
4
5
:
0
0
Search
A-B Repeat
A (Start)
B (End)
Off
4
Starting playback from the specified time.
4
Select the end point for A-B Repeat.
Use / to select Search, then press ENTER.
Use / to select B (End), then press ENTER.
Closing the Play Mode screen
A-B Repeat playback starts.
Press PLAY MODE or
HOME MENU.
To cancel A-B Repeat play
• Select Off from the Repeat/Random screen, then
press ENTER.
• During playback, press STOP or CLEAR.
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• During playback, press STOP or CLEAR.
04
Note
• A-B Repeat play is canceled in the following cases:
Note
– When the angle is switched (for BD-ROM and DVD-
• Random Play is canceled in the following cases:
– When you use the search function.
– When you start Repeat Play.
Video discs only).
– When you search outside the repeat range.
– When you start other Repeat Play or Random Play.
Playing repeatedly
(Repeat Play)
Use this procedure to play the currently playing disc, title,
chapter, track or file repeatedly.
1
During playback, press PLAY MODE to display the
Play Mode screen.
The Play Mode screen can also be displayed by selecting
Play Mode from the TOOLS menu.
2
Select Repeat/Random.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select the type of Repeat Play.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
See the table on page 30 for the types of Repeat Play.
To cancel Repeat Play
• Select Off from the Repeat/Random screen, then
press ENTER.
• During playback, press STOP or CLEAR.
Note
• The type of repeat modes depends on the disc and file
being played. See the table on page 30.
• Repeat Play is canceled in the following cases:
– When the angle is switched (for BD-ROM and DVD-
Video discs only).
– When you search outside the repeat range.
– When you start other Repeat Play or Random Play.
Playing in random order
(Random Play)
Use this procedure to play the tracks or files in random
order.
1
During playback, press PLAY MODE to display the
Play Mode screen.
The Play Mode screen can also be displayed by selecting
Play Mode from the TOOLS menu.
2
Select Repeat/Random.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select the Random Play.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
To cancel Random Play
• Select Off from the Repeat/Random screen, then
press ENTER.
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About Play Mode types
04
The functions that can be used differ according to the type of disc and file. In some cases, some of the functions cannot
be used. Check the usable functions on the table below.
Disc/file type
DVD-R
/-RW
(VR
1
Play Mode type
Mark
BD-
DVD-
BD-R
/-RE
Video Image Audio Audio
AVCHD
2
2
file
file
file
CD
ROM
Video
format)
Playing a specific section
within a title or track
repeatedly (A-B Repeat)
Playing a title repeatedly
(Title Repeat)
Playing a chapter repeatedly
(Chapter Repeat)
Playing a track or file
repeatedly (Track Repeat)
Playing all the titles, tracks
or files on the disc
repeatedly (All Repeat)
3
4
4
5
6
Playing the tracks or files in
random order
(Random Track/File)
Playing from a specific time
(Time Search)
—
—
—
—
Playing a specific title
(Title Search)
Playing a specific chapter
(Chapter Search)
Playing a specific track
(Track Search)
1. The type of Play Mode is indicated by the mark.
2. For BD-ROM and DVD-Video discs, some of the functions cannot be used with some titles.
3. The original titles are played repeatedly. However, the playlist titles cannot be played repeatedly.
4. The files in the folder are played repeatedly.
5. The files in the folder or HMG Playlist are played repeatedly.
6. The tracks in the disc or HMG Playlist are played repeatedly.
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Playing from the
Home Media Gallery
04
Note
• When playing an audio CD (CD-DA or DTS-CD), the
Now Playing screen is displayed.
The Home Media Gallery lets you display a list of the titles,
tracks or files recorded on the disc. The discs that can be
played from the Home Media Gallery are as shown below
(see also page 7).
• Some BD-R/-RE discs have playback protection. To
cancel the protection, input the password set for the
disc.
• To play DVD-R/-RW (VR format) playlists, switch to the
playlist using the Original/Play List command on the
TOOLS menu (page 20).
• BD-R/-RE discs
• DVD-R/-RW (VR format) discs
• Audio CDs (CD-DAs and DTS-CDs)
Playing video files
• DVDs/CDs on which only data files of video, image or
audio files, etc. are recorded
1
Press HOME MEDIA GALLERY to display the
Home Media Gallery.
TV CONTROL
The Home Media Gallery can also be displayed by
selecting Home Media Gallery from Home Menu then
pressing ENTER.
INPUT
SELECT
CH
VOL
AUDIO SUBTITLE ANGLE FL DIMMER
2
Select the disc.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
HOME MEDIA
GALLERY
DISPLAY POPUP MENU
MENU
3
Select Movies.
TOP MENU
TOOLS
Use / to select Movies, then press ENTER.
4
Select Folders or All Movies.
ENTER
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
HOME
MENU
RETURN
• Folders – The files in the selected folder are
displayed.
PLAY
• All Movies – All the recorded files are displayed.
PREV
PAUSE
STOP
NEXT
If you have selected All Movies, proceed to step 6.
5
Select the folder containing the file you want to
Playing discs
play.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
1
Press HOME MEDIA GALLERY to display the
A list of the files and folders in the selected folder is
displayed.
Home Media Gallery.
The Home Media Gallery can also be displayed by
selecting Home Media Gallery from the Home Menu
then pressing ENTER.
6
Select and set the file you want to play.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Playback starts from the selected file, and continues until
the end of the list is reached. Use / to play the
previous or next file.
2
Select the disc.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select the title or track to be played.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Note
BD-R BDAV
• It may take a few seconds before playback starts. This
is normal.
My Favorite TV Program
1 Morning serial drama
2 News at noon
• It may not be possible to play some files properly.
3 Evening movie
• The number of views may be restricted (page 9).
4 Midnight variety show
5 Playback protection
6 World heritage
Playing image files
7 Drama: Blank time
8 Music and us
10 items
1
Press HOME MEDIA GALLERY to display the
Home Media Gallery.
Playback starts.
The Home Media Gallery can also be displayed by
selecting Home Media Gallery from the Home Menu
then pressing ENTER.
Closing the Home Media Gallery
Press HOME MEDIA GALLERY or
HOME MENU.
2
Select the disc.
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Use / to select, then press ENTER.
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3
Select Photos.
If you have selected All Songs, proceed to step 6.
Select the folder containing the file you want to
04
Use / to select Photos, then press ENTER.
5
4
Select Folders or All Photos.
play.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
• Folders – The files in the selected folder are
displayed.
A list of the files and folders in the selected folder is
displayed.
• All Photos – All the recorded files are displayed.
6
Select and set the file you want to play.
If you have selected All Photos, proceed to step 6.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Playback starts from the selected file, and continues until
the end of the list is reached. Use / to play the
previous or next file. The Now Playing screen (shown
below) is displayed.
5
Select the folder containing the file you want to
play.
Use /// to select, then press ENTER.
A list of the files and folders in the selected folder is
displayed.
Currently playing
file
6
Select and set the file you want to play.
Music 001.mp3
Play 0.02.33
0.05.34
Use /// to select, then press ENTER.
DATA DISC
Total file playing
time
Elapsed time
My Folder
DVD-RW/Photos/Folders
Playing in the desired order
(HMG Playlist)
The discs that can add tracks and files to the HMG (Home
Media Gallery) Playlist are as shown below.
99 items
A slideshow starts from the selected file, and continues
until the end of the list is reached. Use /to display
the previous or next file.
• Audio CDs (CD-DAs and DTS-CDs)
• DVDs/CDs on which audio files are recorded
About Slideshow
A display of the files on the disc or in the folder that
switches automatically.
Adding tracks/files
Use this procedure to add tracks and files, and create the
HMG Playlist.
Rotating images
•
Press ANGLE while playing a slideshow.
The image rotates each time the button is pressed
1
Press HOME MEDIA GALLERY to display the
Home Media Gallery.
(90° 180° 270° 0° ... ).
The image can also be rotated by selecting Rotate from
the TOOLS menu.
The Home Media Gallery can also be displayed by
selecting Home Media Gallery from the Home Menu
pressing ENTER.
2
Select the disc.
Playing audio files
Load the disc beforehand.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
1
Press HOME MEDIA GALLERY to display the
Home Media Gallery.
3
Select the track/file to be added.
The Home Media Gallery can also be displayed by
selecting Home Media Gallery from the Home Menu
then pressing ENTER.
Use / to select.
4
Press TOOLS to display the TOOLS menu.
2
Select the disc.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select Music.
Use / to select Music, then press ENTER.
4
Select Folders or All Songs.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
• Folders – The files in the selected folder are
displayed.
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• All Songs – All the recorded files are displayed.
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5
Select Add to HMG Playlist.
Deleting tracks/files from the HMG
Playlist
04
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Folders
1
Select the track/file to be deleted, then press
TOOLS to display the TOOLS menu.
CD-ROM/Music
Music001.mp3
Music002.mp3
Music003.mp3
Music004.mp3
Music005.mp3
2
Use / to select Delete from HMG Playlist, then
press ENTER.
BD PLAYER
TOOLS
Play from Beginning
Add to HMG Playlist
Now Playing
The track or file selected in step 3 is added to the HMG Playlist.
To add more tracks or files, repeat steps 3 to 5.
To add the currently playing track/
file to the HMG Playlist
1
While the track/file is playing, press
TOOLS
to display the TOOLS menu.
2
Use / to select Add to HMG Playlist, then
press ENTER.
Note
• A maximum of 24 tracks/files can be added to the
HMG Playlist.
• The HMG Playlist is cleared in the following cases:
– When the power is turned off.
– When the disc tray is opened.
Playing the HMG Playlist
1
Press HOME MEDIA GALLERY to display the
Home Media Gallery.
The Home Media Gallery can also be displayed by
selecting Home Media Gallery from the Home Menu
pressing ENTER.
2
Select HMG Playlist.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select the track/file to be played.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Playback starts from the selected track/file, and
continues until the end of the list is reached. Use /
to play the previous or next track/file. The Now
Playing screen (shown below) is displayed.
Currently playing
track/file
Music 001.mp3
Play 0.02.33
0.05.34
HMG
DATA DISC
Total track/file
playing time
Elapsed time
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Chapter 5
05
Adjusting audio and video
2
Select the item to be adjusted.
Adjusting the video
The quality of the playback picture can be adjusted
Use / to select.
Video Adjust [ Memory1 ]
according to the TV you are using.
Prog. Motion
Pure Cinema
YNR
Motion
Still
Auto1
TOP MENU
TOOLS
Off
Max
Max
Max
Max
Fine
Max
Off
CNR
ENTER
Off
BNR
HOME
MENU
Off
MNR
RETURN
Soft
Min
Detail
PLAY
White Level
PREV
RED
PAUSE
STOP
BLUE
NEXT
3
Adjust the picture quality.
GREEN
YELLOW
When / are pressed, the adjustments can be made
viewing the picture. The detailed settings screen
reappears when ENTER is pressed.
VIDEO ADJUST
1
During playback, press VIDEO ADJUST to display
Prog. Motion
Motion
Still
the Video Adjust screen.
The Video Adjust screen can also be displayed by
selecting Video Adjust from the TOOLS menu.
• Prog.Motion – Adjust according to the type of image
(moving or still image). This is effective mainly when
outputting video materials as progressive images.
2
Select a preset.
Select using / according to the TV being used.
• Pure Cinema – This setting optimizes the operation of
the progressive scanning circuit for playing film
materials. Normally set it to Auto1. If the picture
seems unnatural, switch this to Auto 2, On or Off
(page 35).
Video Adjust
PDP
Adjustments
• Pioneer PDP – Select this when connected to a
Pioneer plasma TV.
• YNR – Reduces noise in the luminance (Y) signal.
• CNR – Reduces noise in the chroma (C) signal.
• Pioneer LCD – Select this when connected to a
Pioneer liquid crystal display TV.
• BNR – Reduces the block noise (block-shaped
distortion generated upon MPEG compression).
• Pioneer Projector – Select this when connected to a
Pioneer front projector.
• MNR – Reduces the mosquito noise (distortion along
the contours of the picture generated upon MPEG
compression).
• PDP – Select this when connected to a plasma TV of
another brand.
• Detail – Adjusts the picture’s contours.
• LCD – Select this when connected to a liquid crystal
display of another brand.
• White Level – Adjusts the level of the white portions.
• Black Level – Adjusts the level of the black portions.
• Projector – Select this when connected to a front
projector of another brand.
• Black Setup – Select the black level as the setup level.
Normally select 0 IRE. If the black is too dense and all
the dark colors are displayed in a uniform black due
to the combination with the connected TV, select 7.5
IRE.
• Professional – With this setting, video signal
processing is restrained. Select this when connected
to a professional monitor.
• Memory1 to 3 – Picture quality settings with
adjusted parameters can be stored in the memory.
For a description of the parameters, see When
Memory1, 2 or 3 is selected below.
• Gamma Correction – Adjusts how the dark portions
of the picture look.
• Hue – Adjusts the balance between green and red.
• Chroma Level – Adjusts the density of the colors.
When Memory1, 2 or 3 is selected
Note
1
Select Adjustments.
Use to select Adjustments, then press ENTER.
• Prog.Motion and Pure Cinema have the effect only
for pictures recorded in the interlaced scan format
(576i/480i or 1080i signals).
A detailed settings screen appears.
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• Prog.Motion is disabled when Pure Cinema is set to
On.
05
Note
• This only affects the Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus
and Dolby Digital audio signals of BDs, DVDs and
video files.
• Black Setup has the effect only for pictures output
from the VIDEO output terminals, and for NTSC
signals output.
• When Auto is selected, the setting has the same
effect as High or Off for Dolby TrueHD signals,
depending on the content. For Dolby Digital Plus and
Dolby Digital, the setting has the same effect as Off.
• YNR, CNR, BNR and MNR have no effect on 1080/24p
video signals output from the HDMI OUT terminal.
Closing the Video Adjust screen
• Audio DRC affects the audio signals output from the
following audio output terminals:
Press
HOME MENU.
– Analog audio signals output from the AUDIO OUT
terminals.
About Pure Cinema
There are two types of video signals:
– Linear PCM audio signals output from the DIGITAL
OUT terminal or HDMI OUT terminal.
• Video material – Video signals recorded at 25 or 30
frames/second
• Film material – Video signals recorded at 24 frames/
second
• The effect may be weak for some discs.
Adjusting the audio delay
(Lip Sync)
Adjust the audio delay for the selected video output
terminal if the video and audio are not synchronized.
“Pure Cinema” uses signal processing suited for “film
material” when converting 576i/480i or 1080i interlaced
video signals into progressive video signals, resulting in
clear picture reproduction without losing the quality of
the material.
is displayed on the disc information screen when
playing the “film material” pictures of BD-ROM, BD-R/-RE
and DVD-Video discs (page 26).
1
During playback, display the TOOLS menu.
Press TOOLS.
Select and set Audio Adjust.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Select and set Lip Sync.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Select Auto or Manual.
2
Adjusting the audio
3
TOP MENU
TOOLS
4
Use / to select.
ENTER
• Auto – The player automatically adjusts the timing of
the video and audio when connected to a device
equipped with the HDMI Auto Lipsync Correction
feature using an HDMI cable.
HOME
MENU
RETURN
Adjusting the Audio DRC
Audio DRC (Dynamic Range Control) has the effect of
playing loud sounds softly and soft sounds loudly. Adjust
the setting for example when viewing movies late at night
and the dialogs are difficult to hear.
• Manual – Adjust manually while viewing the video.
If you have selected Manual, proceed to step 5.
5
Adjusting the amount of audio delay.
Press , then use / to adjust.
Lip Sync
1
During playback, display the TOOLS menu.
Press TOOLS.
Select and set Audio Adjust.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Select and set Audio DRC.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Adjust the setting.
Manual
100 ms
0
50
100
150
200
250
2
The audio delay can be adjusted from 0 to 250 ms in steps
of 5 ms.
3
Note
4
Use / to switch between Off, Low, Medium, High
and Auto.
• The Lip Sync adjustment is only applicable to the
output terminal set at Output Terminal (page 43).
• The sound may be interrupted while setting the delay.
Closing the Audio DRC screen
Closing the Lip Sync screen
Press ENTER or
HOME MENU.
Press ENTER or
HOME MENU.
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Chapter 6
06
Advanced settings
Changing the settings
CLEAR
ENTER
SECONDARY
AUDIO
VIDEO
OUTPUT
RESOLUTION
VIDEO SELECT PLAY MODE
HOME MEDIA
GALLERY
DISPLAY POPUP MENU
MENU
TOP MENU
TOOLS
ENTER
HOME
MENU
RETURN
PLAY
PREV
PAUSE
STOP
NEXT
Operating the Initial Setup
screen
1
When playback is stopped, display the Home
Menu screen.
Press HOME MENU.
Select and set Initial Setup.
2
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select the item and change the setting.
Use /// to select, then press ENTER.
Example (U.K. models):
Initial Setup
BD PLAYER
Video Out
Audio Out
HDMI
TV Aspect Ratio
4:3 Video Out
DVD 16:9 Video Out
NTSC on PAL TV
ꢀ16:9 (Widescreen)
ꢀFull
ꢀLetter Box
ꢀOn
Network
Language
Playback
Data Management
Setup Navigator
Closing the Initial Setup screen
Press
HOME MENU.
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06
Note
• Items that cannot be changed are indicated in gray. The items that can be selected depend on the player’s status.
• In Options, the factory default settings are indicated in bold.
Setting
Options
Explanation
TV Aspect Ratio
16:9 (Widescreen) Select this when connected to a wide (16:9) TV.
4:3 (Standard)
Full
Select this when connected to a conventional TV.
4:3 Video Out
4:3 pictures are displayed over the entire screen.
Normal
4:3 pictures are displayed with vertical black bars along the sides. Select this
when you cannot switch the aspect ratio to 4:3 on the TV.
4:3 Video Out is only valid when TV Aspect Ratio is set to16:9 (Widescreen).
DVD 16:9 Video Out
Letter Box
16:9 pictures are displayed with black bars at the top and bottom when
viewing on a 4:3 screen.
Pan & Scan
The picture is displayed over the entire screen, with the left and right sides of
the 16:9 picture cropped. Select this to view 4:3 pictures over the entire
screen. For some discs, the picture will be displayed in the Letter Box mode
even if Pan & Scan is set.
• DVD 16:9 Video Out is only valid when TV Aspect Ratio is set to 4:3 (Standard).
• DVD 16:9 Video Out is only valid when playing 16:9 pictures of DVD-Video or DVD-R/-RW (VR format) discs. When other 16:9
pictures are played, they are output in the Letter Box mode.
NTSC on PAL TV
On
Select this when connected to a PAL-only TV. The picture is displayed
correctly on the PAL-only TV even when playing a source with a frame/field
rate other than 50 Hz.
Off
Select this when connected to an NTSC-compatible TV.
• The factory default setting is On for U.K. models, Off for other models.
• Many recent PAL TVs support the input of NTSC signals, in which case this can be set to Off. Also check your TV’s operating
instructions.
Dolby Digital Out
Dolby Digital 1
Dolby Digital audio signals are output. With BD-ROMs, the secondary audio
and interactive audio are mixed for output.
* Only valid for the DIGITAL
OUT terminal.
Dolby Digital 2
Dolby Digital audio signals are output. With BD-ROMs, the signals are output
without mixing the secondary audio and interactive audio signals.
Dolby Digital
PCM
Select this when the connected AV receiver or amplifier, etc., is not
compatible with Dolby Digital audio signals. The Dolby Digital audio signals
are converted into linear PCM audio signals for output.
DTS Out
DTS 1
DTS Digital Surround audio signals are output. With BD-ROMs, the
secondary audio and interactive audio are mixed for output.
* Only valid for the DIGITAL
OUT terminal.
DTS 2
DTS Digital Surround audio signals are output. With BD-ROMs, the signals
are output without mixing the secondary audio and interactive audio signals.
DTS PCM
Select this when the connected AV receiver or amplifier, etc., is not
compatible with DTS Digital Surround audio signals. The DTS Digital
Surround audio signals are converted into linear PCM audio signals for
output.
AAC Out
AAC
Select this when the connected AV receiver or amplifier, etc., is compatible
with AAC audio signals. The AAC audio signals are output.
* Only valid for the DIGITAL
OUT terminal.
AAC PCM
Select this when the connected AV receiver or amplifier, etc., is not
compatible with AAC audio signals. The AAC audio signals are converted into
linear PCM audio signals for output.
DTS Downmix
Stereo
DTS-HD Master Audio signals, DTS-HD High Resolution Audio signals or
DTS Digital Surround audio signals converted to linear PCM audio signals
are converted into 2-channel (stereo) signals for output.
Lt/Rt
DTS-HD Master Audio signals, DTS-HD High Resolution Audio signals or
DTS Digital Surround audio signals converted to linear PCM audio signals
are converted into 2-channel signals compatible with Dolby Surround for
output (when the connected AV receiver or amplifier, etc., is compatible with
Dolby Pro Logic, the AV receiver or amplifier outputs the linear PCM audio
signals as surround audio signals).
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Setting
Options
On
Explanation
06
HDMI High Speed
Transmission
Select this when connected with a High Speed HDMI™ cable (page 13).
Select this when connected with a Standard HDMI™ cable (page 13).
Off
The player’s setting screen is closed if the output video resolution is switched by changing the HDMI High Speed Transmission
setting.
HDMI Color Space
Auto
Select this to automatically switch the video output between YCbCr and RGB
signals according to the connected equipment.
YCbCr 4:4:4
Select this to output the video signals as YCbCr 4:4:4 signals.
YCbCr 4:2:2
Select this to output the video signals as YCbCr 4:2:2 signals.
RGB (16 to 235)
Select this to output the video signals as RGB signals. Choose this if the
colors seem too dense and all the dark colors are displayed in a uniform black
when RGB (0 to 255) is selected.
RGB (0 to 255)
Select this to output the video signals as RGB signals. Choose this if the
colors seem too faint and the black seems too bright when RGB (16 to 235)
is selected.
Normally it is recommended to set this to Auto. When set to Auto, the optimum video signals for your TV are output.
HDMI Audio Out
Auto
The signals are output with as many audio channels as possible. In cases
when the number of channels does not decrease when the signals are output
as such without converting them to linear PCM, they are output as such
(page 45).
PCM
Select this when you want the secondary audio and interactive audio signals
to be mixed for output or when you want to output prioritizing sampling
frequency over the number of channels (page 45).
Off
Select this when you do not want to output the audio from the HDMI output
terminal.
KURO LINK
On
Select this to control the player with the remote control of the AV device
connected using an HDMI cable. Also refer to About KURO LINK function on
page 14.
Off
On
Off
On
Off
Select this when you do not want to control the player with the remote control
of the AV device connected using an HDMI cable.
Display Power On
Select this when you want the TV to turn on each time playback is started or
the Home Menu or Home Media Gallery is displayed on the player.
* Only valid when KURO
LINK is set to On.
Select this when you do not want the TV to turn on each time playback is
started or the Home Menu or Home Media Gallery is displayed on the player.
Display Power Off
Select this when you want the player’s power to turn off together with the TV’s
power.
* Only valid when KURO
LINK is set to On.
Select this when you do not want the player’s power to turn off together with
the TV’s power.
PQLS
Auto
Enables PQLS function (page 14).
* Only valid when KURO
LINK is set to On.
Off
Disables PQLS function (page 14).
IP Address
Select this to set the IP address of the player and DNS server (page 41).
Only set the proxy server if so instructed by your Internet service provider (page 41).
Select this to display a list of the network settings (page 41).
Proxy Server
Display Network
Configuration
Connection Test
Select this to test the network connection (page 42).
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Setting
Options
English
Explanation
06
OSD Language
Select this to set the language of the on-screen displays to English.
available languages Choose a language for the on-screen displays from the listed languages.
Audio Language
English
Select this to set both the BD-ROM and DVD-Video default audio language to
English.
* For some discs, it may not
be possible to change to the
selected language.
available languages Choose a language from the listed languages to set the default audio
language for BD-ROM and DVD-Video playback.
Other
Continue to the next screen to set the default audio language for BD-ROM
and DVD-Video playback. You can select the language name or enter the
code number (see on page 47 for the code table).
If a language not recorded on the BD/DVD is set, one of the recorded languages is automatically selected and played.
Subtitle Language
English
Select this to set the default subtitle language for BD-ROM and DVD-Video
playback to English.
* For some discs, it may not
be possible to change to the
selected language.
available languages Choose a language from the listed languages to set the default subtitle
language for BD-ROM and DVD-Video playback.
Other
Continue to the next screen to set the default subtitle language for BD-ROM
and DVD-Video playback. You can select the language name or enter the
code number (see on page 47 for the code table).
If a language not recorded on the BD/DVD is set, one of the recorded languages is automatically selected and played.
BDMV/DVD-Video Menu
Lang.
w/Subtitle
Language
Sets the language of BD-ROM and DVD-Video menus to the same as that set
for the subtitle language.
* For some discs, it may not
be possible to change to the
selected language.
available languages Choose a language from the listed languages to set the default language for
BD-ROM and DVD-Video menus.
Other
Continue to the next screen to set the default menu language for BD-ROM
and DVD-Video menus. You can select the language name or enter the code
number (see on page 47 for the code table).
If a language not recorded on the BD/DVD is set, one of the recorded languages is automatically selected and played.
Subtitle Display
On
Select this to display the subtitles.
Off
Select this if you do not want to display the subtitles. Note that on some discs
the subtitles are displayed by force.
Still Picture
Field
This eliminates instability of the picture when playback is paused.
Frame
This makes pictures clear when playback is paused, but instability may be
observed.
Auto
Field or Frame is switched automatically according to the disc or file being
played.
Angle/Secondary Indicator On
Select this to display the angle mark, secondary video mark and secondary
audio mark on the TV screen (pages 25 and 26).
Off
Select this if you do not want to display the angle mark, secondary video mark
and secondary audio mark on the TV screen.
DivX VOD
Registration Code
Displays the player’s registration code required to play DivX VOD files
(page 9).
Hybrid Disc Playback
BD
The BD layer of hybrid discs with two or more layers (BD and DVD or CD) is
played.
DVD
CD
The DVD layer of hybrid discs with two or more layers (BD and DVD) is played.
If there is no DVD layer, the BD layer is played.
The CD layer of hybrid discs with two or more layers (BD and CD) is played. If
there is no CD layer, the BD layer is played.
Remove the disc from the disc tray when changing the setting.
BDMV/BDAV Playback
Priority
BDMV
Select this to play the BDMV format on BD-R/-RE discs containing both
BDMV and BDAV formats.
BDAV
Select this to play the BDAV format on BD-R/-RE discs containing both
BDMV and BDAV formats.
Remove the disc from the disc tray when changing the setting.
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Setting
Options
Explanation
06
Individual/Shared Data
Use this to display the list of data used for the BD-LIVE and BONUSVIEW functions and to erase the
Erase
data (page 42).
Remove the disc from the disc tray when changing the setting.
Application Data Erase
Use this to erase bookmarks, high scores of games and other data (page 42).
Remove the disc from the disc tray when changing the setting.
Storage Format
Select this to format the storage device on which the data used by the BD-LIVE and BONUSVIEW
functions is stored (page 42).
Remove the disc from the disc tray when changing the setting.
Setup Navigator
Start making the settings using the Setup Navigator menu. For details, see Making settings using
the Setup Navigator menu on page 18.
Set Password (Change
Password)
Register (change) the password for parental lock settings or for unlocking to play DVD-Video with
parental lock feature (page 43).
DVD-Video Parental Lock
BDMV Parental Lock
Country Code
Change the player’s parental lock level (page 43).
Change the restricted age (page 43).
Change the Country/Area code (page 43).
Output Terminal
Set the terminals from which the player’s video and audio signals are to be output (page 43).
On Screen Display
On
Off
On
Select this to display the operation indicators (Play, Stop, etc.) on the TV
screen.
Select this if you do not want to display the operation indicators (Play, Stop,
etc.) on the TV screen.
Screen Saver
The screen saver is automatically activated if there is no operation for over 1
minute after playback is stopped or paused.
The screen saver is automatically activated if there is no operation for over 1
minute after the Home Menu or Home Media Gallery is displayed while
playing a BD or DVD.
With audio CDs and audio files, the screen saver is automatically activated if
no button is operated for over 1 minute, even while the audio CD or audio file
is playing.
The screen saver turns off when an operation is performed on the player or
remote control.
Off
The screen saver is not activated.
Auto Power Off
On
Select this to turn the power off automatically (the power turns off
automatically if no operation is performed for over 30 minutes).
Off
Select this if you do not want the power to turn off automatically.
Software Update
The Software Update function can check for and download updated system software from the
network server (page 44).
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2
Select and set Use or Not use at Proxy Server.
Setting the IP address
06
Use / to change, then press .
1
Select and set Network IP Address Next
Network
BD PLAYER
Screen.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Proxy Server
2
Set IP address.
Proxy Server
Server Select Method
Server Name
Use
Server Name
Use /// to set the IP address of the player or DNS
server, then press ENTER.
Port Number
Network
BD PLAYER
IP Address
Off
Auto Set IP Address
IP Address
• Use – Select this when using a proxy server.
Subnet Mask
Default Gateway
• Not use – Select this when not using a proxy server.
Off
Auto Set DNS Server Address
DNS Server (Primary)
DNS Server (Secondary)
If you have selected Use, proceed to step 3.
3
Select and set Server Select Method.
Use / to change, then press .
• IP Address – Input the IP address.
• Server Name – Input the server name.
• Auto Set IP Address
On – The player’s IP address is obtained
automatically. Select this when using a broadband
router or broadband modem that has a DHCP
(Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) server
function. This player’s IP address will automatically
be allocated from the DHCP server.
4
Input IP Address or Server Name.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the number if you
select IP address by step 3. Use / to move the cursor.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input characters if you
select Server Name by step 3.
Off – The player’s IP address must be set manually.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the IP
address, subnet mask and default gateway.
The characters that can be input for the server name are
listed on the table below. Pressing a button repeatedly
cycles through the characters shown.
• Auto Set DNS Server Address
• If you want to enter two characters in succession that
are both on the same button (for example a P and an
R), press after inputting the first character then
input the second character.
On – The DNS server’s IP address is obtained
automatically.
Off – The DNS server’s IP address must be set
manually. Use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the
DNS server’s IP address stipulated by your Internet
service provider.
• Use CLEAR to delete the last character.
• Use / to move the displayed characters when all
the input characters cannot be displayed.
Note
Key
1
Characters
Key
6
Characters
• When Auto Set IP Address is set to Off, Auto Set
DNS Server Address is also set to Off.
1 . –
m n o 6
a b c 2
d e f 3
g h i 4
j k l 5
p q r s 7
t u v 8
w x y z 9
0
2
7
• For information on DHCP server function, refer to the
network device’s operating instructions.
3
8
• You may need to contact your Internet service
provider or network administrator when inputting the
IP address manually.
4
9
5
0
Setting the proxy server
Only set the proxy server if so instructed by your Internet
service provider.
5
6
Input Port Number.
Press , use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the
number.
1
Select and set Network Proxy Server Next
Press ENTER to set.
Screen.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Displaying the network settings
Select and set Network Display Network
Configuration Next Screen.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
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The MAC address, IP address, subnet mask, default
gateway and DNS server (primary and secondary)
settings are displayed.
Erasing data that has been added to
BDs and application data
Use this procedure to erase data that has been added to
BDs (data downloaded with the BD-LIVE function and
data used with the BONUSVIEW function) and
application data.
06
When Auto Set IP Address is set to On, the values
obtained automatically are displayed.
Note
• “0.0.0.0” is displayed when each IP address has not
been set.
Caution
• Some time is required to erase the data.
Testing the network connection
• Do not unplug the power cord while data is being
erased.
Select and set Network Connection Test
Start.
• This operation does not work when a disc is loaded.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
1
Select and set Data Management.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
“Network connection test completed successfully.” is
displayed once the test is completed. If any other
message is displayed, check the connections and/or
settings (pages 17 and 41).
2
Select and set the erase menu.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
• Individual/Shared Data Erase
Changing to other language at
language setting
Use this procedure to select and erase data
downloaded with the BD-LIVE function and data used
with the BONUSVIEW function (page 8).
1
Select and set Language.
Select Next Screen, then press ENTER. The list
screen appears.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
2
Select and set Audio Language, Subtitle
Individual/Shared Data Erase
BD PLAYER
Language or BDMV/DVD-Video Menu Lang.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Shared Data
Disc Name 1
Disc Name 2
Disc Name 3
Disc Name 4
Disc Name 5
Disc Name 6
Disc Name 7
15 items
3
Select and set Other.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
4
Change the language.
Use / to change, then press ENTER.
Initial Setup
BD PLAYER
When a disc name is selected, the data downloaded
with the BD-LIVE function and data used with the
BONUSVIEW is erased.
Audio Language
Language
Video Out
Audio Out
HDMI
English
When Shared Data is selected, all the data
downloaded with the BD-LIVE function and not
associated to discs is erased.
Network
Language
Playback
Number
0
5
1
4
Data Management
Setup Navigator
Use / to select the data to be erased, then press
ENTER.
• Application Data Erase
• The language can also be changed using the number
buttons. Use / to move the cursor to Number,
use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the number,
then press ENTER. Refer to Language Code Table and
Country/Area Code Table on page 47.
Use this procedure to erase BD-ROM application data
(high scores of games, bookmarks data, etc.).
Select Start, then press ENTER.
• Storage Format
Use this procedure to format the storage in which the
data downloaded with the BD-LIVE function and data
used with the BONUSVIEW function is stored
(page 8).
Note
• If a language not recorded on the BD/DVD is set, one
of the recorded languages is automatically selected
and played.
When this is done, all the data on the external
storage device is erased.
Select Start, then press ENTER.
3
Select Yes, then press ENTER.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
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Registering or Changing the
password
Changing the Age Restriction for
viewing BD-ROMs
06
Use this procedure to register or change the code
number required for the Parental Lock settings.
For BD-ROMs containing scenes of violence, for example,
viewing can be restricted by setting an age restriction for
the BD-ROMs.
1
Select and set Parental Lock Set Password
Next Screen.
1
Select and set Parental Lock BDMV Parental
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
Lock Next Screen.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
2
Input the password.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the
2
Input the password.
number, then press ENTER to set.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the
number, then press ENTER to set.
Use / to move the cursor.
Use / to move the cursor.
3
Re-input the password.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the
3
Change the age.
number, then press ENTER to set.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the
number, then press ENTER to set.
Use / to move the cursor.
Use / to move the cursor.
• To change the password, input the previously
registered password, then input the new password.
Note
Note
• When Age Restriction is set to 255, viewing is not
restricted.
• We recommend making a note of the password.
• If you forget the password, reset the player to the
factory default setting, then register the password
again (page 44).
Changing the Country/Area code
1
Select and set Parental Lock Country Code
Next Screen.
Changing the Parental Lock level for
viewing DVDs
Some DVD-Video discs containing scenes of violence, for
example, have Parental Lock levels (check the indications
on the disc’s jacket or elsewhere). To restrict viewing
these discs, set the player’s level to the level lower than
the discs.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
2
Input the password.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the
number, then press ENTER to set.
Use / to move the cursor.
3
Change the country/area code.
Use / to change, then press ENTER to set.
1
Select and set Parental Lock DVD-Video
• The the country/area code can also be changed using
the number buttons. Use / to move the cursor to
Number, use the number buttons (0 to 9) to input the
number, then press ENTER. Refer to Language Code
Table and Country/Area Code Table on page 47.
Parental Lock Next Screen.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
2
Input the password.
Use the number buttons (0 to 9) or / to input the
number, then press ENTER to set.
Setting the output terminals
Use / to move the cursor.
Set the terminals from which the player’s video and audio
signals are to be output.
3
Change the level.
Use / to change, then press ENTER to set.
1
Select and set Options Output Terminal
Next Screen.
Note
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
• The level can be set to Off or between Level1 and
2
Select and set the video and audio output
Level8. When set to Off, viewing is not restricted.
terminals.
Select the actually connected video and audio output
terminals.
Use /// to select, then press ENTER.
For details on the settings, refer to step 4 on page 18.
When COMPONENT VIDEO or VIDEO is selected for
Video, no sound is output from the HDMI OUT terminal
(a warning message is displayed).
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6
Updating starts.
Software updating
The software of the player can be updated by connecting
06
The front panel display shows messages such as
“DATA CHECK”, “WRT SYS1”, “WRT DRV” and “WRT
FLC”.
it to the Internet using a LAN cable.
• Software updating may take a certain period of time.
Before updating the software, make sure that you have
connected the player to the network and made the
necessary settings (pages 17 and 41).
7
Updating completes.
The front panel display shows “DOWNLOAD OK” and
the player turns off automatically.
Caution
Restoring all the settings to
the factory default settings
• Do not unplug the power cord during software
updating. Otherwise, the updating will be aborted and
malfunction may occur with the player.
• There are two processes for software updating,
downloading and updating. Both processes may take
a certain period of time.
1
Check that the player’s power is turned on.
2
When a disc is playing, press to stop playback.
Eject the disc from the player.
• Depending on the Internet connection conditions,
downloading may take a long time.
3
While pressing , press STANDBY/ON.
Operate using the buttons on the player’s front panel.
• Other operations are defeated during software
updating. Furthermore updating process cannot be
canceled.
Note
• When the front panel display is off, turn it on with FL
DIMMER. When updating the player’s software with
the front panel display off, do not unplug the power
cord until the FL OFF indicator turns off.
• After restoring all the settings to the factory default
settings, use Setup Navigator to reset the player
(page 18).
• When all the settings are restored to the factory
defaults, all the data for the secondary video (Picture-
in-Picture), secondary audio, bookmarks, etc., is
erased.
Note
• Steps 1 to 4 are the operations performed by the user
(they are intended to download the software from the
Internet).
• Steps 5 to 7 are the operations performed
(automatically) by the player (they are intended to
update the software).
1
When playback is stopped, display the Home
Menu screen.
Press HOME MENU.
Select and set Initial Setup.
2
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
3
Select and set Options Software Update
Start.
Use / to select, then press ENTER.
• If the player is already running the latest software, the
message “The player’s software is up to date and does
not need updating.” is displayed.
4
Select and set Yes.
Use / to select Yes, then press ENTER.
• The help menu is displayed if the player cannot
connect to the Internet. Check the connections and
settings (pages 17 and 41).
5
Downloading of the software start.
The software download status is displayed on the screen.
• Depending on the Internet connection conditions,
software downloading may take a certain period of
time.
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About the audio output settings
The audio signals that are output differ according to the audio format recorded on the disc and the player’s settings.
06
Check on the table below.
Caution
• When ANALOG AUDIO is selected at Output Terminal, no audio signals are output from the HDMI OUT terminal
or DIGITAL OUT terminal (pages 18 and 43).
• When HDMI or DIGITAL AUDIO is selected at Output Terminal, linear PCM audio signals (2 channels) are output
from all terminals other than the ones selected at Output Terminal (pages 18 and 43).
• The output from all terminals other than the ones selected for Audio does not sound as intended by the content
provider.
AUDIO OUT
terminals
DIGITAL OUT terminal
HDMI OUT terminal
Audio format
Converted to
Not converted to
3
3
PCM
Auto
1
2
linear PCM audio linear PCM audio
5,6
BD-
ROM
Dolby Digital
5.1-channel audio
7.1-channel audio
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital
Plus
Dolby Digital
4
Dolby Digital
5,6
Plus
7
5,6,8
Dolby TrueHD
7.1-channel audio
Dolby TrueHD
DTS Digital
Surround
DTS Digital
7.1-channel audio
5,9
Surround
Converted to
Converted to
2-channel audio
2-channel audio
DTS-HD High
Resolution
Audio
DTS-HD High
Resolution
DTS Digital
4
Surround
5,7,9
7
Audio
7.1-channel audio
DTS-HD Master
Audio
DTS-HD Master
5,9,10
Audio
Linear PCM
Converted to 2-
channel audio
7
7.1-channel audio
6
BD-R/ Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital
MPEG-2 AAC
Converted to
2-channel audio
Converted to
2-channel audio
5.1-channel audio
-RE
MPEG-2 AAC
MPEG-2 AAC
MPEG
2-channel audio
Linear PCM
6
DVD-
Video
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital
Converted to
2-channel audio
Converted to
2-channel audio
5.1-channel audio
5.1-channel audio
DTS Digital
Surround
DTS Digital
DTS Digital
Surround
9
Surround
MPEG
2-channel audio
Dolby Digital
Linear PCM
DVD-R/ Dolby Digital
-RW
Converted to
2-channel audio
Converted to
2-channel audio
6
Dolby Digital
(VR
format)
MPEG
2-channel audio
Linear PCM
1. When Dolby Digital Out is set to Dolby Digital PCM, DTS Out is set to DTS PCM, or AAC Out is set to AAC PCM (page 37).
2. When Dolby Digital Out is set to Dolby Digital 1/Dolby Digital 2, DTS Out is set to DTS 1/DTS 2 or AAC Out is set to AAC (page 37).
3. When HDMI Audio Out is set to PCM or Auto (page 38).
4. When outputting Dolby Digital or DTS Digital Surround bitstream with settings of Dolby Digital 2 at Dolby Digital Out, DTS 2 at DTS Out,
the secondary audio and interactive audio signals are not mixed for output.
5. When outputting the bitstream of Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby Digital, DTS-HD Master Audio, DTS-HD High Resolution Audio
or DTS Digital Surround, the secondary audio and interactive audio signals are not mixed for output.
6. If the connected HDMI device is not compatible with Dolby TrueHD or Dolby Digital Plus bitstream, the signals are output in linear PCM (7.1
channels) or Dolby Digital bitstream.
If the connected HDMI device is not compatible with Dolby Digital bitstream, the signals are output in linear PCM (2 channels).
7. When the output video resolution is set to 576i/480i or 576p/480p, the signals may be output in linear PCM (2 channels), depending on HDMI
High Speed Transmission setting and/or the connected HDMI device (page 13).
8. When the output video resolution is set to 576i/480i or 576p/480p, the signals may be output in linear PCM (2 channels) or Dolby Digital
bitstream, depending on HDMI High Speed Transmission setting and/or the connected HDMI device (page 13).
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9. If the connected HDMI device is not compatible with DTS-HD Master Audio or DTS-HD High Resolution Audio, the signals are output in
linear PCM (2 channels) or DTS Digital Surround bitstream.
If the connected HDMI device is not compatible with DTS Digital Surround bitstream, the signals are output in linear PCM (2 channels).
10. When the output video resolution is set to 576i/480i or 576p/480p, the signals may be output in linear PCM (2 channels) or DTS Digital
Surround, depending on HDMI High Speed Transmission setting and/or the connected HDMI device.
06
Note
• Only compatible with 7.1-channel surround back. 6.1-channel surround back is output in 7.1 channels. In other
cases, output as audio signals of 5.1-channels or less.
• When outputting linear PCM audio signals, if the number of compatible channels of the connected HDMI device
is lower, the signals are output with the number of channels for which the device is compatible.
• The audio signals output from the DIGITAL OUT terminal have a sampling frequency of 48 kHz (44.1 kHz for audio
CDs).
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Language Code Table and Country/Area Code Table
06
Language Code Table
Language name, language code, input code
Abkhazian, ab/abk, 0102
Afar, aa/aar, 0101
Afrikaans, af/afr, 0106
Albanian, sq/sqi, 1917
Amharic, am/amh, 0113
Arabic, ar/ara, 0118
Armenian, hy/hye, 0825
Assamese, as/asm, 0119
Aymara, ay/aym, 0125
Azerbaijani, az/aze, 0126
Bashkir, ba/bak, 0201
Basque, eu/eus, 0521
Belarusian, be/bel, 0205
Bengali, bn/ben, 0214
Bihari, bh/bih, 0208
French, fr/fra, 0618
Malagasy, mg/mlg, 1307
Malay, ms/msa, 1319
Malayalam, ml/mal, 1312
Maltese, mt/mlt, 1320
Maori, mi/mri, 1309
Marathi, mr/mar, 1318
Mongolian, mn/mon, 1314
Moldavian, mo/mol, 1315
Nauru, na/nau, 1401
Nepali, ne/nep, 1405
Norwegian, no/nor, 1415
Occitan, oc/oci, 1503
Oriya, or/ori, 1518
Oromo, om/orm, 1513
Panjabi, pa/pan, 1601
Persian, fa/fas, 0601
Polish, pl/pol, 1612
Portuguese, pt/por, 1620
Pushto, ps/pus, 1619
Quechua, qu/que, 1721
Romanian, ro/ron, 1815
Romansch, rm/roh, 1813
Rundi, rn/run, 1814
Slovenian, sl/slv, 1912
Somali, so/som, 1915
Sotho, Southern, st/sot, 1920
Spanish, es/spa, 0519
Sundanese, su/sun, 1921
Swahili, sw/swa, 1923
Swati, ss/ssw, 1919
Galician, gl/glg, 0712
Georgian, ka/kat, 1101
German, de/deu, 0405
Greek, el/ell, 0512
Guarani, gn/grn, 0714
Gujarati, gu/guj, 0721
Hausa, ha/hau, 0801
Hebrew, iw/heb, 0923
Hindi, hi/hin, 0809
Swedish, sv/swe, 1922
Tagalog, tl/tgl, 2012
Tajik, tg/tgk, 2007
Hungarian, hu/hun, 0821
Icelandic, is/isl, 0919
Indonesian, in/ind, 0914
Interlingua, ia/ina, 0901
Interlingue, ie/ile, 0905
Inupiaq, ik/ipk, 0911
Irish, ga/gle, 0701
Tamil, ta/tam, 2001
Tatar, tt/tat, 2020
Telugu, te/tel, 2005
Thai, th/tha, 2008
Tibetan, bo/bod, 0215
Tigrinya, ti/tir, 2009
Bislama, bi/bis, 0209
Breton, br/bre, 0218
Bulgarian, bg/bul, 0207
Burmese, my/mya, 1325
Catalan, ca/cat, 0301
Central Khmer, km/khm, 1113
Chinese, zh/zho, 2608
Corsican, co/cos, 0315
Croatian, hr/hrv, 0818
Czech, cs/ces, 0319
Tonga (Tonga Islands), to/ton, 2015
Tsonga, ts/tso, 2019
Tswana, tn/tsn, 2014
Turkmen, tk/tuk, 2011
Turkish, tr/tur, 2018
Twi, tw/twi, 2023
Italian, it/ita, 0920
Japanese, ja/jpn, 1001
Javanese, jw/jav, 1023
Kalaallisut, kl/kal, 1112
Kannada, kn/kan, 1114
Kashmiri, ks/kas, 1119
Kazakh, kk/kaz, 1111
Kinyarwanda, rw/kin, 1823
Kirghiz, ky/kir, 1125
Korean, ko/kor, 1115
Kurdish, ku/kur, 1121
Lao, lo/lao, 1215
Ukrainian, uk/ukr, 2111
Urdu, ur/urd, 2118
Russian, ru/rus, 1821
Samoan, sm/smo, 1913
Sango, sg/sag, 1907
Sanskrit, sa/san, 1901
Scottish Gaelic, gd/gla, 0704
Serbian, sr/srp, 1918
Serbo-Croatian, sh/---, 1908
Shona, sn/sna, 1914
Uzbek, uz/uzb, 2126
Vietnamese, vi/vie, 2209
Volapük, vo/vol, 2215
Welsh, cy/cym, 0325
Western Frisian, fy/fry, 0625
Wolof, wo/wol, 2315
Xhosa, xh/xho, 2408
Yiddish, ji/yid, 1009
Yoruba, yo/yor, 2515
Zulu, zu/zul, 2621
Danish, da/dan, 0401
Dutch, nl/nld, 1412
Dzongkha, dz/dzo, 0426
English, en/eng, 0514
Esperanto, eo/epo, 0515
Estonian, et/est, 0520
Finnish, fi/fin, 0609
Latin, la/lat, 1201
Latvian, lv/lav, 1222
Lingala, ln/lin, 1214
Lithuanian, lt/lit, 1220
Macedonian, mk/mkd, 1311
Sindhi, sd/snd, 1904
Sinhalese, si/sin, 1909
Slovak, sk/slk, 1911
Fijian, fj/fij, 0610
Faroese, fo/fao, 0615
Country/Area Code Table
Country/Area name, Country/Area code, input code
Anguilla, ai, 0109
Estonia, ee, 0505
Finland, fi, 0609
France, fr, 0618
Georgia, ge, 0705
Germany, de, 0405
Greece, gr, 0718
Greenland, gl, 0712
Grenada, gd, 0704
Guyana, gy, 0725
Haiti, ht, 0820
Luxembourg, lu, 1221
Slovakia, sk, 1911
Antigua and Barbuda, ag, 0107
Argentina, ar, 0118
Armenia, am, 0113
Australia, au, 0121
Austria, at, 0120
Macedonia, the Former Yugoslav Slovenia, si, 1909
Republic of, mk, 1311
Malaysia, my, 1325
Malta, mt, 1320
Mexico, mx, 1324
Moldova, Republic of, md, 1304
Monaco, mc, 1303
Spain, es, 0519
Suriname, sr, 1918
Sweden, se, 1905
Switzerland, ch, 0308
Taiwan, Province of China, tw, 2023
Tajikistan, tj, 2010
Azerbaijan, az, 0126
Bahamas, bs, 0219
Barbados, bb, 0202
Belarus, by, 0225
Montserrat, ms, 1319
Netherlands, nl, 1412
New Zealand, nz, 1426
Norway, no, 1415
Thailand, th, 2008
Trinidad and Tobago, tt, 2020
Tunisia, tn, 2014
Belgium, be, 0205
Belize, bz, 0226
Hong Kong, hk, 0811
Hungary, hu, 0821
Iceland, is, 0919
India, in, 0914
Turkey, tr, 2018
Bermuda, bm, 0213
Brazil, br, 0218
Pakistan, pk, 1611
Turkmenistan, tm, 2013
Turks and Caicos Islands, tc, 2003
Ukraine, ua, 2101
Peru, pe, 1605
Bulgaria, bg, 0207
Canada, ca, 0301
Indonesia, id, 0904
Ireland, ie, 0905
Philippines, ph, 1608
Poland, pl, 1612
United Kingdom, gb, 0702
United States, us, 2119
Uruguay, uy, 2125
Uzbekistan, uz, 2126
Venezuela, ve, 2205
Virgin Islands, British, vg, 2207
Cayman Islands, ky, 1125
Chile, cl, 0312
Israel, il, 0912
Italy, it, 0920
Portugal, pt, 1620
Puerto Rico, pr, 1618
Romania, ro, 1815
China, cn, 0314
Jamaica, jm, 1013
Japan, jp, 1016
Colombia, co, 0315
Croatia, hr, 0818
Russian Federation, ru, 1821
Saint Kitts and Nevis, kn, 1114
Saint Lucia, lc, 1203
Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines, vc, 2203
San Marino, sm, 1913
Singapore, sg, 1907
Kazakhstan, kz, 1126
Korea, Republic of, kr, 1118
Kyrgyzstan, kg, 1107
Latvia, lv, 1222
Cyprus, cy, 0325
Czech Republic, cz, 0326
Denmark, dk, 0411
Dominica, dm, 0413
Dominican Republic, do, 0415
Liechtenstein, li, 1209
Lithuania, lt, 1220
47
En
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Chapter 7
07
Additional information
This product includes cryptographic software written by
Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com).This product includes
• We don’t promise that this software works. However, we
will be interested in any kind of bug reports.(‘as is’
distribution)
• You can use this software for whatever you want, in parts
or full form, without having to pay us.(‘royalty-free’
usage)
Licenses
software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
Original SSLeay License
Copyright © 1995-1998 Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)
All rights reserved.
This package is an SSL implementation written by Eric
Young (eay@cryptsoft.com). The implementation was
The licenses for the software used on
this player are shown below.
• You may not pretend that you wrote this software. If you
use it, or only parts of it, in a program, you must
acknowledge somewhere in your documentation that
you have used the FreeType code.(‘credits’)
We specifically permit and encourage the inclusion of this
software, with or without modifications, in commercial
products. We disclaim all warranties covering The FreeType
Project and assume no liability related to The FreeType
Project.
Finally, many people asked us for a preferred form for a
credit/disclaimer to use in compliance with this license.
We thus encourage you to use the following text:
Portions of this software are copyright © <year> The
Please replace <year> with the value from the FreeType
version you actually use.
libxml2
The MIT License
Copyright © <year> <copyright holders>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
obtaining a copy of this software and associated
documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the
Software without restriction, including without limitation
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute,
sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so,
subject to the following conditions:
written so as to conform with Netscapes SSL.
This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use
as long as the following conditions are aheared to. The
following conditions apply to all code found in this
distribution, be it the RC4, RSA, lhash, DES, etc., code; not
just the SSL code. The SSL documentation included with
this distribution is covered by the same copyright terms
except that the holder is Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
Copyright remains Eric Young’s, and as such any Copyright
notices in the code are not to be removed. If this package is
used in a product, Eric Young should be given attribution as
the author of the parts of the library used. This can be in the
form of a textual message at program startup or in
documentation (online or textual) provided with the
package.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, are permitted provided that the
following conditions are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
provided with the distribution.
3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of
this software must display the following
acknowledgement: “This product includes cryptographic
software written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)”
The word ‘cryptographic’ can be left out if the rouines
from the library being used are not cryptographic related
:-).
4. If you include any Windows specific code (or a derivative
thereof) from the apps directory (application code) you
must include an acknowledgement: “This product
includes software written by Tim Hudson
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall
be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
Software.
Legal Terms
0. Definitions
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT
WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT
SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR
OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
Throughout this license, the terms ‘package’, ‘FreeType
Project’, and ‘FreeType archive’ refer to the set of files
originally distributed by the authors (David Turner,
Robert Wilhelm, and Werner Lemberg) as the ‘FreeType
Project’, be they named as alpha, beta or final release.
‘You’ refers to the licensee, or person using the project,
where ‘using’ is a generic term including compiling the
project’s source code as well as linking it to form a
‘program’ or ‘executable’. This program is referred to as
‘a program using the FreeType engine’.
This license applies to all files distributed in the original
FreeType Project, including all source code, binaries and
documentation, unless otherwise stated in the file in its
original, unmodified form as distributed in the original
archive. If you are unsure whether or not a particular file
is covered by this license, you must contact us to verify
this.
OpenSSL
The OpenSSL toolkit stays under a dual license, i.e. both the
conditions of the OpenSSL License and the original SSLeay
license apply to the toolkit.
See below for the actual license texts. Actually both
licenses are BSD-style Open Source licenses. In case of any
license issues related to OpenSSL please contact openssl-
core@openssl.org.
The FreeType Project is copyright (C) 1996-2000 by David
Turner, Robert Wilhelm, and Werner Lemberg. All rights
reserved except as specified below.
OpenSSL License
Copyright © 1998-2007 The OpenSSL Project. All rights
reserved.
(tjh@cryptsoft.com)”
1. No Warranty
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG “AS IS”
AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA,
OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER
IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF
THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
THE FREETYPE PROJECT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’
WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS
OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT WILL ANY
OF THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES CAUSED BY THE USE OR
THE INABILITY TO USE, OF THE FREETYPE PROJECT.
2. Redistribution
This license grants a worldwide, royalty-free, perpetual
and irrevocable right and license to use, execute,
perform, compile, display, copy, create derivative works
of, distribute and sublicense the FreeType Project (in
both source and object code forms) and derivative works
thereof for any purpose; and to authorize others to
exercise some or all of the rights granted herein, subject
to the following conditions:
• Redistribution of source code must retain this license
file (‘FTL.TXT’) unaltered; any additions, deletions or
changes to the original files must be clearly indicated
in accompanying documentation. The copyright
notices of the unaltered, original files must be
preserved in all copies of source files.
• Redistribution in binary form must provide a
disclaimer that states that the software is based in part
of the work of the FreeType Team, in the distribution
documentation. We also encourage you to put an URL
to the FreeType web page in your documentation,
though this isn’t mandatory.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, are permitted provided that the
following conditions are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
provided with the distribution.
3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of
this software must display the following
acknowledgment: “This product includes software
developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the
4. The names “OpenSSL Toolkit” and “OpenSSL Project”
must not be used to endorse or promote products
derived from this software without prior written
permission. For written permission, please contact
openssl-core@openssl.org.
5. Products derived from this software may not be called
“OpenSSL” nor may “OpenSSL” appear in their names
without prior written permission of the OpenSSL Project.
6. Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the
following acknowledgment: “This product includes
software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OpenSSL
PROJECT “AS IS” AND ANY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OpenSSL
PROJECT OR ITS CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY,
OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR
BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON
ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGE.
The licence and distribution terms for any publically
available version or derivative of this code cannot be
changed. i.e. this code cannot simply be copied and put
under another distribution licence [including the GNU
Public Licence.]
zlib
for information.
FreeType2
The FreeType Project LICENSE
2006-Jan-27 Copyright 1996-2002, 2006 by David Turner,
Robert Wilhelm, and Werner Lemberg
Introduction
The FreeType Project is distributed in several archive
packages; some of them may contain, in addition to the
FreeType font engine, various tools and contributions
which rely on, or relate to, the FreeType Project.
This license applies to all files found in such packages, and
which do not fall under their own explicit license. The
license affects thus the FreeType font engine, the test
programs, documentation and makefiles, at the very least.
This license was inspired by the BSD, Artistic, and IJG
(Independent JPEG Group) licenses, which all encourage
inclusion and use of free software in commercial and
freeware products alike. As a consequence, its main points
are that:
These conditions apply to any software derived from or
based on the FreeType Project, not just the unmodified
files. If you use our work, you must acknowledge us.
However, no fee need be paid to us.
3. Advertising
Neither the FreeType authors and contributors nor you
shall use the name of the other for commercial,
advertising, or promotional purposes without specific
prior written permission.
We suggest, but do not require, that you use one or more
of the following phrases to refer to this software in your
documentation or advertising materials: ‘FreeType
Project’, ‘FreeType Engine’, ‘FreeType library’, or
‘FreeType Distribution’.
48
En
As you have not signed this license, you are not required
to accept it. However, as the FreeType Project is
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copyrighted material, only this license, or another one
contracted with the authors, grants you the right to use,
distribute, and modify it. Therefore, by using,
distributing, or modifying the FreeType Project, you
indicate that you understand and accept all the terms of
this license.
product, acknowledgment is not required but would be
appreciated.
A “png_get_copyright” function is available, for convenient
use in “about” boxes and the like:
printf(“%s”,png_get_copyright(NULL));Also, the PNG logo
(in PNG format, of course) is supplied in the files
“pngbar.png” and “pngbar.jpg (88x31) and “pngnow.png”
(98x31).
Libpng is OSI Certified Open Source Software. OSI Certified
Open Source is a certification mark of the Open Source
Initiative.
aren’t implemented yet. For legal reasons, we are not
distributing code for the arithmetic-coding variants of
JPEG; see LEGAL ISSUES. We have made no provision for
supporting the hierarchical or lossless processes defined
in the standard.
07
We provide a set of library routines for reading and writing
JPEG image files, plus two sample applications “cjpeg” and
“djpeg”, which use the library to perform conversion
between JPEG and some other popular image file formats.
The library is intended to be reused in other applications.
In order to support file conversion and viewing software, we
have included considerable functionality beyond the bare
JPEG coding/decoding capability; for example, the color
quantization modules are not strictly part of JPEG
decoding, but they are essential for output to colormapped
file formats or colormapped displays. These extra functions
can be compiled out of the library if not required for a
particular application. We have also included jpegtran, a
utility for lossless transcoding between different JPEG
processes, and “rdjpgcom” and “wrjpgcom”, two simple
applications for inserting and extracting textual comments
in JFIF files.
The emphasis in designing this software has been on
achieving portability and flexibility, while also making it fast
enough to be useful. In particular, the software is not
intended to be read as a tutorial on JPEG. (See the
REFERENCES section for introductory material.) Rather, it
is intended to be reliable, portable, industrial-strength
code. We do not claim to have achieved that goal in every
aspect of the software, but we strive for it.
4. Contacts
There are two mailing lists related to FreeType:
Discusses general use and applications of FreeType,
as well as future and wanted additions to the library
and distribution. If you are looking for support, start in
this list if you haven’t found anything to help you in the
documentation.
Glenn Randers-Pehrson
glennrp at users.sourceforge.net
2-Apr-08
libjpg
The Independent JPEG Group’s JPEG software
README for release 6b of 27-Mar-1998
Discusses bugs, as well as engine internals, design
issues, specific licenses, porting, etc.
Our home page can be found at
This distribution contains the sixth public release of the
Independent JPEG Group’s free JPEG software. You are
welcome to redistribute this software and to use it for any
purpose, subject to the conditions under LEGAL ISSUES,
below.
Serious users of this software (particularly those
incorporating it into larger programs) should contact IJG at
mailing list. Mailing list members are notified of updates
and have a chance to participate in technical discussions,
etc.
This software is the work of Tom Lane, Philip Gladstone, Jim
Boucher, Lee Crocker, Julian Minguillon, Luis Ortiz, George
Phillips, Davide Rossi, Guido Vollbeding, Ge’ Weijers, and
other members of the Independent JPEG Group.
IJG is not affiliated with the official ISO JPEG standards
committee.
libpng
COPYRIGHT NOTICE, DISCLAIMER, and LICENSE:
If you modify libpng you may insert additional notices
immediately following this sentence.
libpng versions 1.2.6, August 15, 2004, through 1.2.26, April
2, 2008, are Copyright © 2004, 2006-2008 Glenn Randers-
Pehrson, and are distributed according to the same
disclaimer and license as libpng-1.2.5 with the following
individual added to the list of Contributing Authors
Cosmin Truta
libpng versions 1.0.7, July 1, 2000, through 1.2.5 - October
3, 2002, are Copyright © 2000-2002 Glenn Randers-
Pehrson, and are distributed according to the same
disclaimer and license as libpng-1.0.6 with the following
individuals added to the list of Contributing Authors
Simon-Pierre Cadieux
We welcome the use of this software as a component of
commercial products. No royalty is required, but we do ask
for an acknowledgement in product documentation, as
described under LEGAL ISSUES.
LEGAL ISSUES
In plain English:
DOCUMENTATION ROADMAP
This file contains the following sections:
1. We don’t promise that this software works. (But if you
find any bugs, please let us know!)
Eric S. Raymond
Gilles Vollant
OVERVIEW
General description of JPEG and
the IJG software.
2. You can use this software for whatever you want. You
don’t have to pay us.
3. You may not pretend that you wrote this software. If you
use it in a program, you must acknowledge somewhere
in your documentation that you’ve used the IJG code.
In legalese:
and with the following additions to the disclaimer:
There is no warranty against interference with your
enjoyment of the library or against infringement. There is
no warranty that our efforts or the library will fulfill any of
your particular purposes or needs. This library is provided
with all faults, and the entire risk of satisfactory quality,
performance, accuracy, and effort is with the user.
libpng versions 0.97, January 1998, through 1.0.6, March
20, 2000, are Copyright © 1998, 1999 Glenn Randers-
Pehrson, and are distributed according to the same
disclaimer and license as libpng-0.96, with the following
individuals added to the list of Contributing Authors:
Tom Lane
Glenn Randers-Pehrson
Willem van Schaik
libpng versions 0.89, June 1996, through 0.96, May 1997,
are Copyright © 1996, 1997 Andreas Dilger Distributed
according to the same disclaimer and license as libpng-
0.88, with the following individuals added to the list of
Contributing Authors:
LEGAL ISSUES
Copyright, lack of warranty, terms
of distribution.
REFERENCES
Where to learn more about JPEG.
ARCHIVE LOCATIONS Where to find newer versions of
this software.
RELATED SOFTWARE Other stuff you should get.
The authors make NO WARRANTY or representation, either
express or implied, with respect to this software, its quality,
accuracy, merchantability, or fitness for a particular
purpose. This software is provided “AS IS”, and you, its
user, assume the entire risk as to its quality and accuracy.
This software is copyright © 1991-1998, Thomas G. Lane. All
Rights Reserved except as specified below.
Permission is hereby granted to use, copy, modify, and
distribute this software (or portions thereof) for any
purpose, without fee, subject to these conditions:
(1)If any part of the source code for this software is
distributed, then this README file must be included,
with this copyright and no-warranty notice unaltered;
and any additions, deletions, or changes to the original
files must be clearly indicated in accompanying
documentation.
FILE FORMAT WARS Software *not* to get.
TO DO
Plans for future IJG releases.
Other documentation files in the distribution are:
User documentation:
install.doc
usage.doc
How to configure and install the IJG
software.
Usage instructions for cjpeg, djpeg,
jpegtran, rdjpgcom, and wrjpgcom.
*.1 Unix-style man pages for programs (same info as
usage.doc).
wizard.doc
Advanced usage instructions for JPEG
wizards only.
change.log
Version-to-version change highlights.
John Bowler
Kevin Bracey
Programmer and internal documentation:
libjpeg.doc
How to use the JPEG library in your own
(2)If only executable code is distributed, then the
accompanying documentation must state that “this
software is based in part on the work of the Independent
JPEG Group”.
Sam Bushell
Magnus Holmgren
Greg Roelofs
Tom Tanner
programs.
Sample code for calling the JPEG library.
structure.doc Overview of the JPEG library’s internal
example.c
structure.
(3)Permission for use of this software is granted only if the
user accepts full responsibility for any undesirable
consequences; the authors accept NO LIABILITY for
damages of any kind.
These conditions apply to any software derived from or
based on the IJG code, not just to the unmodified library. If
you use our work, you ought to acknowledge us.
Permission is NOT granted for the use of any IJG author’s
name or company name in advertising or publicity relating
to this software or products derived from it. This software
may be referred to only as “the Independent JPEG Group’s
software”.
libpng versions 0.5, May 1995, through 0.88, January 1996,
are Copyright © 1995, 1996 Guy Eric Schalnat, Group 42,
Inc.
For the purposes of this copyright and license,
“Contributing Authors” is defined as the following set of
individuals:
Andreas Dilger
Dave Martindale
Guy Eric Schalnat
Paul Schmidt
filelist.doc
Road map of IJG files.
coderules.doc Coding style rules --- please read if you
contribute code.
Please read at least the files install.doc and usage.doc.
Useful information can also be found in the JPEG FAQ
(Frequently Asked Questions) article. See ARCHIVE
LOCATIONS below to find out where to obtain the FAQ
article.
If you want to understand how the JPEG code works, we
suggest reading one or more of the REFERENCES, then
looking at the documentation files (in roughly the order
listed) before diving into the code.
Tim Wegner
The PNG Reference Library is supplied “AS IS”. The
Contributing Authors and Group 42, Inc. disclaim all
warranties, expressed or implied, including, without
limitation, the warranties of merchantability and of fitness
for any purpose. The Contributing Authors and Group 42,
Inc. assume no liability for direct, indirect, incidental,
special, exemplary, or consequential damages, which may
result from the use of the PNG Reference Library, even if
advised of the possibility of such damage.
Permission is hereby granted to use, copy, modify, and
distribute this source code, or portions hereof, for any
purpose, without fee, subject to the following restrictions:
1. The origin of this source code must not be misrepresented.
2. Altered versions must be plainly marked as such and
must not be misrepresented as being the original source.
3. This Copyright notice may not be removed or altered from
any source or altered source distribution.
The Contributing Authors and Group 42, Inc. specifically
permit, without fee, and encourage the use of this source
code as a component to supporting the PNG file format in
commercial products. If you use this source code in a
We specifically permit and encourage the use of this
software as the basis of commercial products, provided
that all warranty or liability claims are assumed by the
product vendor.
ansi2knr.c is included in this distribution by permission of
L. Peter Deutsch, sole proprietor of its copyright holder,
Aladdin Enterprises of Menlo Park, CA. ansi2knr.c is NOT
covered by the above copyright and conditions, but instead
by the usual distribution terms of the Free Software
Foundation; principally, that you must include source code
if you redistribute it. (See the file ansi2knr.c for full details.)
However, since ansi2knr.c is not needed as part of any
program generated from the IJG code, this does not limit
you more than the foregoing paragraphs do.
The Unix configuration script “configure” was produced
with GNU Autoconf. It is copyright by the Free Software
Foundation but is freely distributable. The same holds for its
supporting scripts (config.guess, config.sub, ltconfig,
ltmain.sh). Another support script, install-sh, is copyright
by M.I.T. but is also freely distributable.
OVERVIEW
This package contains C software to implement JPEG
image compression and decompression. JPEG
(pronounced “jay-peg”) is a standardized compression
method for full-color and gray-scale images. JPEG is
intended for compressing real-world scenes; line drawings,
cartoons and other non-realistic images are not its strong
suit. JPEG is lossy, meaning that the output image is not
exactly identical to the input image. Hence you must not
use JPEG if you have to have identical output bits. However,
on typical photographic images, very good compression
levels can be obtained with no visible change, and
remarkably high compression levels are possible if you can
tolerate a low-quality image. For more details, see the
references, or just experiment with various compression
settings.
This software implements JPEG baseline, extended-
sequential, and progressive compression processes.
Provision is made for supporting all variants of these
processes, although some uncommon parameter settings
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It appears that the arithmetic coding option of the JPEG
spec is covered by patents owned by IBM, AT&T, and
Mitsubishi. Hence arithmetic coding cannot legally be
used without obtaining one or more licenses. For this
reason, support for arithmetic coding has been removed
from the free JPEG software. (Since arithmetic coding
provides only a marginal gain over the unpatented Huffman
mode, it is unlikely that very many implementations will
support it.) So far as we are aware, there are no patent
restrictions on the remaining code.
The IJG distribution formerly included code to read and
write GIF files. To avoid entanglement with the Unisys LZW
patent, GIF reading support has been removed altogether,
and the GIF writer has been simplified to produce
uncompressed GIFs. This technique does not use the LZW
algorithm; the resulting GIF files are larger than usual, but
are readable by all standard GIF decoders.
text version at ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/jfif.txt.gz, but it
is missing the figures.
this point it is unclear whether SPIFF will supersede JFIF or
whether JFIF will remain the de-facto standard. IJG intends
to support SPIFF once the standard is frozen, but we have
not decided whether it should become our default output
format or not. (In any case, our decoder will remain capable
of reading JFIF indefinitely.)
Various proprietary file formats incorporating JPEG
compression also exist. We have little or no sympathy for
the existence of these formats. Indeed, one of the original
reasons for developing this free software was to help force
convergence on common, open format standards for JPEG
files. Don’t use a proprietary file format!
07
The TIFF 6.0 file format specification can be obtained by FTP
from ftp://ftp.sgi.com/graphics/tiff/TIFF6.ps.gz. The JPEG
incorporation scheme found in the TIFF 6.0 spec of 3-June-
92 has a number of serious problems. IJG does not
recommend use of the TIFF 6.0 design (TIFF Compression
tag 6). Instead, we recommend the JPEG design proposed
by TIFF Technical Note #2 (Compression tag 7). Copies of
this Note can be obtained from ftp.sgi.com or from ftp://
ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/. It is expected that the next
revision of the TIFF spec will replace the 6.0 JPEG design
with the Note’s design. Although IJG’s own code does not
support TIFF/JPEG, the free libtiff library uses our library to
implement TIFF/JPEG per the Note. libtiff is available from
ftp://ftp.sgi.com/graphics/tiff/.
TO DO
The major thrust for v7 will probably be improvement of
visual quality. The current method for scaling the
quantization tables is known not to be very good at low Q
values. We also intend to investigate block boundary
smoothing, “poor man’s variable quantization”, and other
means of improving quality-vs-file-size performance
without sacrificing compatibility.
In future versions, we are considering supporting some of
the upcoming JPEG Part 3 extensions --- principally,
variable quantization and the SPIFF file format.
As always, speeding things up is of great interest.
Please send bug reports, offers of help, etc. to jpeg-
ARCHIVE LOCATIONS
We are required to state that
The “official” archive site for this software is ftp.uu.net
(Internet address 192.48.96.9). The most recent released
version can always be found there in directory graphics/
jpeg. This particular version will be archived as ftp://
ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/jpegsrc.v6b.tar.gz. If you don’t
have direct Internet access, UUNET’s archives are also
available via UUCP; contact help@uunet.uu.net for
information on retrieving files that way.
Numerous Internet sites maintain copies of the UUNET
files. However, only ftp.uu.net is guaranteed to have the
latest official version.
You can also obtain this software in DOS-compatible “zip”
archive format from the SimTel archives (ftp://
ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/msdos/graphics/), or on
CompuServe in the Graphics Support forum (GO
CIS:GRAPHSUP), library 12 JPEG Tools. Again, these
versions may sometimes lag behind the ftp.uu.net release.
The JPEG FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) article is a
useful source of general information about JPEG. It is
updated constantly and therefore is not included in this
distribution. The FAQ is posted every two weeks to Usenet
newsgroups comp.graphics.misc, news.answers, and
other groups. It is available on the World Wide Web at http:/
archive sites, including the official news.answers archive at
rtfm.mit.edu: ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/
jpeg-faq/. If you don’t have Web or FTP access, send e-mail
to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with body
“The Graphics Interchange Format(c) is the Copyright
property of CompuServe Incorporated. GIF(sm) is a
Service Mark property of CompuServe Incorporated.”
REFERENCES
We highly recommend reading one or more of these
references before trying to understand the innards of the
JPEG software.
The best short technical introduction to the JPEG
compression algorithm is
Wallace, Gregory K. “The JPEG Still Picture Compression
Standard”,
Communications of the ACM, April 1991 (vol. 34 no. 4),
pp. 30-44.
(Adjacent articles in that issue discuss MPEG motion
picture compression, applications of JPEG, and related
topics.) If you don’t have the CACM issue handy, a
PostScript file containing a revised version of Wallace’s
article is available at ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/
wallace.ps.gz. The file (actually a preprint for an article that
appeared in IEEE Trans. Consumer Electronics) omits the
sample images that appeared in CACM, but it includes
corrections and some added material. Note: the Wallace
article is copyright ACM and IEEE, and it may not be used
for commercial purposes.
A somewhat less technical, more leisurely introduction to
JPEG can be found in The Data Compression Book by Mark
Nelson and Jean-loup Gailly, published by M&T Books (New
York), 2nd ed. 1996, ISBN 1-55851-434-1. This book provides
good explanations and example C code for a multitude of
compression methods including JPEG. It is an excellent
source if you are comfortable reading C code but don’t
know much about data compression in general. The book’s
JPEG sample code is far from industrial-strength, but when
you are ready to look at a full implementation, you’ve got
one here...
libupnp
Copyright (c) 2000-2003 Intel Corporation
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, are permitted provided that the
following conditions are met:
*
Redistributions of source code must retain the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer.
*
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
provided with the distribution.
*
Neither name of Intel Corporation nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote
products derived from this software without specific
prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
send usenet/news.answers/jpeg-faq/part1
send usenet/news.answers/jpeg-faq/part2
RELATED SOFTWARE
Numerous viewing and image manipulation programs now
support JPEG. (Quite a few of them use this library to do so.)
The JPEG FAQ described above lists some of the more
popular free and shareware viewers, and tells where to
obtain them on Internet.
“AS IS” AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
EVENT SHALL INTEL OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,
EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
The best full description of JPEG is the textbook “JPEG Still
Image Data Compression Standard” by William B.
Pennebaker and Joan L. Mitchell, published by Van
Nostrand Reinhold, 1993, ISBN 0-442-01272-1. Price
US$59.95, 638 pp. The book includes the complete text of
the ISO JPEG standards (DIS 10918-1 and draft DIS 10918-
2). This is by far the most complete exposition of JPEG in
existence, and we highly recommend it.
If you are on a Unix machine, we highly recommend Jef
Poskanzer’s free PBMPLUS software, which provides many
useful operations on PPM-format image files. In particular,
it can convert PPM images to and from a wide range of
other formats, thus making cjpeg/djpeg considerably more
useful. The latest version is distributed by the NetPBM
group, and is available from numerous sites, notably ftp://
wuarchive.wustl.edu/graphics/graphics/packages/
NetPBM/. Unfortunately PBMPLUS/NETPBM is not nearly
as portable as the IJG software is; you are likely to have
difficulty making it work on any non-Unix machine.
A different free JPEG implementation, written by the PVRG
group at Stanford, is available from ftp://
havefun.stanford.edu/pub/jpeg/. This program is designed
for research and experimentation rather than production
use; it is slower, harder to use, and less portable than the
IJG code, but it is easier to read and modify. Also, the PVRG
code supports lossless JPEG, which we do not. (On the
other hand, it doesn’t do progressive JPEG.)
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA,
OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER
IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF
THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
The JPEG standard itself is not available electronically; you
must order a paper copy through ISO or ITU. (Unless you
feel a need to own a certified official copy, we recommend
buying the Pennebaker and Mitchell book instead; it’s
much cheaper and includes a great deal of useful
explanatory material.) In the USA, copies of the standard
may be ordered from ANSI Sales at (212) 642-4900, or from
Global Engineering Documents at (800) 854-7179. (ANSI
doesn’t take credit card orders, but Global does.) It’s not
cheap: as of 1992, ANSI was charging $95 for Part 1 and $47
for Part 2, plus 7% shipping/handling. The standard is
divided into two parts, Part 1 being the actual specification,
while Part 2 covers compliance testing methods. Part 1 is
titled “Digital Compression and Coding of Continuous-tone
Still Images, Part 1: Requirements and guidelines” and has
document numbers ISO/IEC IS 10918-1, ITU-T T.81. Part 2 is
titled “Digital Compression and Coding of Continuous-tone
Still Images, Part 2: Compliance testing” and has
document numbers ISO/IEC IS 10918-2, ITU-T T.83.
Some extensions to the original JPEG standard are defined
in JPEG Part 3, a newer ISO standard numbered ISO/IEC IS
10918-3 and ITU-T T.84. IJG currently does not support any
Part 3 extensions.
The JPEG standard does not specify all details of an
interchangeable file format. For the omitted details we
follow the “JFIF” conventions, revision 1.02. A copy of the
JFIF spec is available from:
Literature Department
C-Cube Microsystems, Inc.
1778 McCarthy Blvd.
Milpitas, CA 95035
phone (408) 944-6300, fax (408) 944-6314
A PostScript version of this document is available by FTP at
AVC/H.264
THIS PRODUCT IS LICENSED UNDER THE AVC PATENT
PORTFOLIO LICENSE FOR THE PERSONAL AND NON-
COMMERCIAL USE OF A CONSUMER TO (i) ENCODE
VIDEO IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE AVC STANDARD (”AVC
VIDEO”) AND/OR (ii) DECODE AVC VIDEO THAT WAS
ENCODED BY A CONSUMER ENGAGED IN A PERSONAL
AND NON-COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY AND/OR WAS
OBTAINED FROM A VIDEO PROVIDER LICENSED TO
PROVIDE AVC VIDEO. No LICENSE IS GRANTED OR
SHALL BE IMPLIED FOR ANY OTHER USE. ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM MPEG LA, L.L.C.
SEE HTTP://MPEGLA.COM.
FILE FORMAT WARS
Some JPEG programs produce files that are not compatible
with our library. The root of the problem is that the ISO
JPEG committee failed to specify a concrete file format.
Some vendors “filled in the blanks” on their own, creating
proprietary formats that no one else could read. (For
example, none of the early commercial JPEG
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright © 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51
Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim
copies of this license document, but changing it is not
allowed.
implementations for the Macintosh were able to exchange
compressed files.)
The file format we have adopted is called JFIF (see
REFERENCES). This format has been agreed to by a
number of major commercial JPEG vendors, and it has
become the de facto standard. JFIF is a minimal or “low
end” representation. We recommend the use of TIFF/JPEG
(TIFF revision 6.0 as modified by TIFF Technical Note #2) for
“high end” applications that need to record a lot of
additional data about an image. TIFF/JPEG is fairly new and
not yet widely supported, unfortunately.
The upcoming JPEG Part 3 standard defines a file format
called SPIFF. SPIFF is interoperable with JFIF, in the sense
that most JFIF decoders should be able to read the most
common variant of SPIFF. SPIFF has some technical
advantages over JFIF, but its major claim to fame is simply
that it is an official standard rather than an informal one. At
Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to take away
your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU
General Public License is intended to guarantee your
freedom to share and change free software - to make sure
the software is free for all its users. This General Public
License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation’s
software and to any other program whose authors commit
to using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software
is covered by the GNU Lesser General Public License
instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too.
When we speak of free software, we are referring to
freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are
ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/jfif.ps.gz. There is also a plain
50
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designed to make sure that you have the freedom to
distribute copies of free software (and charge for this
service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get
it if you want it, that you can change the software or use
pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you
can do these things.
To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that
forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to
surrender the rights. These restrictions translate to certain
responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of the
software, or if you modify it.
For example, if you distribute copies of such a program,
whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all
the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too,
receive or can get the source code. And you must show
them these terms so they know their rights.
We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the
software, and (2) offer you this license which gives you legal
permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software.
Also, for each author’s protection and ours, we want to
make certain that everyone understands that there is no
warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by
someone else and passed on, we want its recipients to
know that what they have is not the original, so that any
problems introduced by others will not reflect on the
original authors’ reputations.
License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections
when you distribute them as separate works. But when
you distribute the same sections as part of a whole which
is a work based on the Program, the distribution of the
whole must be on the terms of this License, whose
permissions for other licensees extend to the entire
whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who
wrote it.
Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or
contest your rights to work written entirely by you; rather,
the intent is to exercise the right to control the
distribution of derivative or collective works based on the
Program.
In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based
on the Program with the Program (or with a work based
on the Program) on a volume of a storage or distribution
medium does not bring the other work under the scope
of this License.
3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work
based on it, under Section 2) in object code or executable
form under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided
that you also do one of the following:
license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the
Program by all those who receive copies directly or
indirectly through you, then the only way you could
satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain entirely
from distribution of the Program.
07
If any portion of this section is held invalid or
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balance of the section is intended to apply and the
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It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to
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This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is
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8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted
in certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted
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a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding
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on a medium customarily used for software
Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by
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To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must
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The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution
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interchange; or,
b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least
three years, to give any third party, for a charge no
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permission to modify or distribute the Program or its
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9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/
or new versions of the General Public License from time
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TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING,
DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
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10.If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other
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Activities other than copying, distribution and
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How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
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This product include the software licensed for use under
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charged the fee for distribution.
To obtain a copy, contact your local Pioneer Customer
Support Center.
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Condensation
Cautions on use
07
If the player is moved suddenly from a cold place into a
warm room (in winter, for example) or if the temperature
in the room in which the player is installed rises suddenly
due to a heater, etc., water droplets (condensation) may
form inside (on operating parts and the lens). When
condensation is present, the player will not operate
properly and playback is not possible. Let the player stand
at room temperature for 1 or 2 hours with the power
turned on (the time depends on the extent of
Moving the player
If you need to move this unit, first remove the disc if
there’s one loaded, and close the disc tray. Next, press
STANDBY/ON to switch the power to standby,
checking that the POWER OFF indication on the front
panel display goes off. Wait at least 10 seconds. Lastly,
disconnect the power cord.
condensation). The water droplets will dissipate and
playback will become possible.
Never lift or move the unit during playback — discs rotate
at a high speed and may be damaged.
Condensation can also occur in the summer if the player
is exposed to the direct wind from an air-conditioner. If
this happens, move the player to a different place.
Place of installation
Select a stable place near the TV and AV system to which
the unit is connected.
Cleaning the player
Normally, wipe the player with a soft cloth. For tough dirt,
apply some neutral detergent diluted in 5 to 6 parts water
to a soft cloth, wring out thoroughly, wipe off the dirt, then
wipe again with a dry cloth.
Do not place the player on top of a TV or color monitor.
Keep it away from cassette decks or other components
easily affected by magnetism.
Avoid the following types of places:
• Places exposed to direct sunlight
• Humid or poorly ventilated places
• Extremely hot or cold places
• Places subject to vibration
• Dusty places
Note that getting alcohol, thinner, benzene or insecticide
on the player could cause the print and coating to peel off.
Also, avoid leaving rubber or vinyl products in contact
with the player for long periods of time, as this could
damage the cabinet.
When using chemical-impregnated wipes, etc., read the
wipe’s cautions carefully.
• Places exposed to soot, steam or heat (in kitchens,
etc.)
Unplug the power cord from the power outlet when
cleaning the player.
Do not place objects on top
Do not place objects on top of the player.
Caution for when the unit is
installed in a rack with a glass
door
Do not obstruct the ventilation
holes
Do not use the player on a shaggy rug, bed, or sofa, and
do not cover the player with a cloth, etc. Doing so will
prevent heat dissipation and could lead to damage.
Do not press the OPEN/CLOSE on the remote control
to open the disc tray while the glass door is closed. The
door will hamper the movement of the disc tray, and the
unit could be damaged.
Keep away from heat
Do not place the player on top of an amplifier or other
device generating heat. When installing in a rack, to avoid
the heat generated by the amplifier and other devices,
place it on a shelf below the amplifier whenever possible.
Cleaning the pickup lens
The player’s lens should not become dirty in normal use,
but if for some reason it should malfunction due to dust
or dirt, consult your nearest Pioneer authorized service
center. Although lens cleaners for players are
commercially available, we advise against using them
since some may damage the lens.
Turn the power off when not
using the player
Depending on the conditions of the TV broadcast signals,
striped patterns may appear on the screen when the TV is
turned on while the player’s power is turned on. This is not
a malfunction with the player or TV. If this happens, turn
the player’s power off. In the same way, noise may be
heard in the sound of a radio.
Handling discs
Do not use damaged (cracked or warped) discs.
Do not scratch the disc’s signal surface or let it get dirty.
Do not load more than one disc into the player at a time.
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Do not glue paper or put stickers onto the disc, or use a
pencil, ball-point pen or other sharp-tipped writing
instrument. These could all damage the disc.
Do not use benzene, thinner or other volatile chemicals.
Also do not use record spray or antistatic agents.
07
For tough dirt, apply some water to a soft cloth, wring out
thoroughly, wipe off the dirt, then wipe off the moisture
with a dry cloth.
Specially shaped discs
Specially shaped discs (heart-shaped, hexagonal, etc.)
cannot be used on this player. Never use such discs, as
they will damage the player.
Storing discs
Always store discs in their cases, and place the cases
vertically, avoiding places exposed to high temperature or
humidity, direct sunlight or extremely low temperatures.
Be sure to read the cautions included with the disc.
Cleaning discs
It may not be possible to play the disc if there are
fingerprints or dust on it. In this case, using a cleaning
cloth, etc., to wipe the disc gently from the center toward
the outer edge. Do not use a dirty cleaning cloth.
Condensation on discs
If the disc is moved suddenly from a cold place into a
warm room (in winter, for example), water droplets
(condensation) may form on the disc surface. Discs will
not play properly if there is condensation on them.
Carefully wipe off the water droplets from the disc surface
before using the disc.
Troubleshooting
Incorrect operation is often mistaken for trouble or malfunction. If you think that there is something wrong with this
component, check the points below. Sometimes the trouble may lie in another component. Inspect the other
components and electrical appliances being used. If the trouble cannot be rectified even after checking the points
below, ask your nearest Pioneer authorized service center or your dealer to carry out repair work.
Playback
Problem
Check
Remedy
• Disc does not play.
Is the disc one that is
playable on this player?
Check whether the disc is one that can be played on this player
(page 7).
• Disc tray opens
automatically.
Is the file one that is playable • Check whether the file is one that can be played on this player
on this player?
(page 9).
• Check whether or not the file is damaged.
Is the disc scratched?
It may not be possible to play scratched discs.
Clean the disc (above).
Is the disc dirty?
Is there a piece of paper or
The disc may be warped and unplayable.
sticker attached to the disc?
Is the disc properly set in the • Set the disc with the printed side facing up.
disc tray?
• Set the disc properly in the depression in the disc tray.
Is the region number correct? See About region numbers on page 9 for the region numbers of discs
that can be played on this player.
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Problem
Check
Remedy
07
No picture is displayed or the Is the video cable properly
• Connect the cable properly according to the connected devices
picture is not displayed
connected?
(page 13).
properly.
• Insert the cable firmly and all the way in.
Is the video cable damaged? If the cable is damaged, replace it with a new one.
Is the input setting on the Read the operating instructions of the connected components and
connected TV or AV receiver switch to the proper input.
or amplifier right?
Are you viewing the picture Press VIDEO SELECT to switch the video output terminal to be viewed
from the video output
terminalselectedwithVIDEO
SELECT?
(page 21).
Is the output video resolution Use OUTPUT RESOLUTION to switch to a resolution at which the video
properly set?
and audio signals are output (page 21).
• Is the player connected
with an HDMI cable other
1080p or Deep Color video signals may not be output properly,
depending on the HDMI cable being used or the player’s settings.
than a High Speed HDMI™ Press while pressing on the player’s front panel to restore the
cable (with a Standard
HDMI™ cable)?
video outputs to the factory default settings. After this, if you wish to
output the video signals with 1080p or Deep Color, connect the TV
using a High Speed HDMI™ cable without built-in equalizer, then reset
the player using the Setup Navigator (page 18).
• Are you using an HDMI
cable with built-in equalizer?
Does the connected TV
If the picture is not displayed when playing a disc with a frame rate that
support the frame rate of the is not supported, the picture will not be displayed even when playback
video signal being output by is stopped. In this case, use the procedure below to switch the frame
the player?
rate of the video signals output from the player.
Eject the disc and close the disc tray. Then, press OPEN/CLOSE
while pressing on the player’s front panel to switch to a frame rate
supported by the connected TV.
Is NTSC on PAL TV properly When viewing the video signals output from the player’s S-Video or
set?
Video terminal, set NTSC on PAL TV properly (page 37).
The picture may not be displayed properly if a DVI device is connected.
Change the HDMI Color Space setting (page 38).
Is a DVI device connected?
Is HDMI Color Space
properly set?
Picture freezes and the front
panel and remote control
buttons stop working.
• Press STOP to stop playback, then restart playback.
• If the playback cannot be stopped, press STANDBY/ON on the
player’s front panel to turn off the power, then turn the power back on.
• If the power cannot be turned off, press and hold STANDBY/ON
on the player’s front panel for over 5 seconds. The power will turn off.
Motion is unnatural or
Change the Pure Cinema setting (page 34).
picture is not clear.
No picture is displayed or
picture is not output in high
definition when playing BDs.
With some discs, it may not be possible to output the video signals from
the VIDEO output terminal or the COMPONENT VIDEO output
terminals. In this case, connect using an HDMI cable (page 13).
• Picture is disturbed during
playback.
• This player supports Macrovision analog copy protection technology.
With some TVs (such as with built-in video deck), the picture will not be
displayed properly when the copy protected DVD title is played. This is
not a malfunction.
• Picture is dark.
• If the player and TV are connected via a DVD recorder/video deck,
etc., the picture will not be displayed properly due to analog copy
protection. Connect the player and TV directly.
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Problem
Check
Remedy
07
• Picture is stretched.
Is the TV’s aspect ratio
Read the TV’s operating instructions and set the TV’s aspect ratio
properly.
properly set?
• Picture is cropped.
• Aspect ratio cannot be
switched.
Is TV Aspect Ratio properly Set TV Aspect Ratio properly (page 37).
set?
Is 4:3 Video Out properly
Set 4:3 Video Out properly (page 37).
set?
Is DVD 16:9 Video Out
Set DVD 16:9 Video Out properly (page 37).
properly set?
When video signals with a resolution of 1080/50i, 1080/50p, 720/50p,
1080/24p, 1080/60i, 1080/60p or 720/60p are being output from the
HDMI OUT terminal or the COMPONENT VIDEO output terminals,
they may be output with an aspect ratio of 16:9 even if TV Aspect Ratio
is set to 4:3 (Standard) (page 37).
Picture is interrupted.
The picture may be interrupted when the resolution of the recorded
video signal switches. Press OUTPUT RESOLUTION to select a setting
other than Auto or Source Direct (page 21).
The subtitles cannot be
switched.
The subtitles cannot be switched for discs recorded on a DVD or BD
recorder.
Sound and picture are not
synchronized.
Is Output Terminal properly Set Output Terminal properly (pages 18 and 43).
set?
Is Lip Sync properly set?
Adjust the amount of audio delay with the Lip Sync setting (page 35).
• No sound is output.
Is the disc played back in
slow motion?
No sound is output during slow motion play and forward and reverse
scanning.
• Sound is not output
properly.
Is the disc played back in fast
forward or fast reverse?
Are the audio cables properly • Connect the cable properly according to the connected devices
(page 13).
connected?
• Insert the cable firmly and all the way in.
Is the audio cable damaged? If the cable is damaged, replace it with a new one.
Are the connected
components (AV receiver or
amplifier, etc.) properly set?
Read the operating instructions of the connected components and
check the volume, input, speaker settings, etc.
Are you trying to listen to the Audio signals are not output from the HDMI OUT terminal when video
signals are being output from the COMPONENT VIDEO or VIDEO
output terminals. When watching the picture of the COMPONENT
VIDEO or VIDEO output terminals, connect an optical digital audio
cable or regular audio cables to listen to the sound (page 16). Once
connections are completed, use Setup Navigator to make the player’s
settings (page 18).
sound of the HDMI OUT
terminal while watching the
picture from the
COMPONENT VIDEO or
VIDEO output terminals?
Is HDMI Audio Out properly Set HDMI Audio Out to Auto or PCM. (page 38).
set?
Is Output Terminal properly When ANALOG AUDIO is selected at Output Terminal, no audio
signals are output from the HDMI OUT or DIGITAL OUT terminal
set?
(page 43).
Is the output video resolution Use OUTPUT RESOLUTION to switch to the resolution at which the
video and audio signals are output (page 21).
properly set?
Is a DVI device connected?
The sound will not be output from the HDMI OUT terminal if a DVI
device is connected. Connect the device to a DIGITAL OUT terminal or
the AUDIO OUT terminals (page 16).
For some BDs, audio signals are only output from DIGITAL OUT
terminal or the HDMI OUT terminal.
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Problem
Check
Remedy
07
Multi-channel sound is not
Is Output Terminal properly Linear PCM (2-channel) audio signals are output from output terminals
other than the one set at Output Terminal under Audio Out. Set
output.
set?
Output Terminal properly (page 43).
Is the audio output of the
connected AV receiver or
amplifier, etc., properly set?
Read the operating instructions of the connected AV receiver or
amplifier and check the audio output settings of AV receiver or
amplifier.
Is multi-channel sound
selected?
Use the menu screen or AUDIO to switch the disc’s sound to multi-
channel.
Noise can be heard when
outputting DTS Digital
Surround signals from the
DIGITAL OUT terminal.
Is the connected AV receiver If an AV receiver or amplifier that is not compatible with DTS Digital
or amplifier compatible with Surround is connected to the DIGITAL OUT terminal, set DTS Out to
DTS Digital Surround?
DTS PCM (page 37).
192 kHz or 96 kHz digital
audio signals cannot be
output from the DIGITAL
OUT terminal.
It is not possible to output 192 kHz or 96 kHz digital audio signals from
this player’s DIGITAL OUT terminal. The signals are automatically
converted to 48 kHz or less for output.
Secondary audio or
interactive audio is not
output.
Is HDMI Audio Out properly When listening to the sound from an HDMI OUT terminal, set HDMI
set? Audio Out to PCM (page 38).
Are Dolby Digital Out and When listening to the sound from an DIGITAL OUT terminal, set Dolby
DTS Out properly set?
Digital Out to Dolby Digital 1, DTS Out to DTS 1 (page 37).
Sound is fast or slow.
When an HDMI cable is
When a Pioneer AV receiver or amplifier compatible with the PQLS
connected, are audio signals function is connected directly to the player’s HDMI OUT terminal using
being output from devices an HDMI cable, the PQLS function is activated when playing discs.
connected with cables other Because of this, the sound output from components other than the
than HDMI cables?
ones connected by HDMI cable may be fast or slow. If this happens, set
PQLS to Off (page 38).
After a disc is inserted,
Loading stays displayed and recorded on the disc?
playback does not start.
Are there too many files
When a disc on which files are recorded is inserted, depending on the
number of files recorded on the disc, loading may take several dozen
minutes.
is displayed in file names,
etc.
The characters that cannot be displayed on this player are displayed in
.
A message indicating low
memory appears while
playing a BD-ROM disc.
• Perform Individual/Shared Data Erase or Storage Format
(page 42).
• Perform Application Data Erase (page 42).
The DVD layer of BD and DVD Is Hybrid Disc Playback
Set Hybrid Disc Playback to DVD (page 39).
hybrid discs cannot be
properly set?
played.
The CD layer of BD and CD Is Hybrid Disc Playback
Set Hybrid Disc Playback to CD (page 39).
hybrid discs cannot be
properly set?
played.
The BDMV format on BD-R/
-RE discs cannot be played.
To play the BDMV format on BD-R/-RE discs containing both BDMV
and BDAV formats, set BDMV/BDAV Playback Priority to BDMV
(page 39).
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KURO LINK
07
Problem
Check
Remedy
KURO LINK function does
not work.
Is the HDMI cable properly
connected?
To use the KURO LINK function, connect the Flat Screen TV, and AV
system (AV receiver or amplifier, etc.) and HD AV Converter to the
HDMI OUT terminal (page 15).
Is the HDMI cable you are
Use a High Speed HDMI™ cable. The KURO LINK function may not
using a High Speed HDMI™ work properly if HDMI cable other than a High Speed HDMI™ cable is
cable? used.
Are you connected to the TV If video signals are being output from a terminal other than the HDMI
using an HDMI cable to
watch the picture?
OUT terminal, the KURO LINK function does not work. Connect to the
TV using an HDMI cable and press VIDEO SELECT to switch to the
HDMI OUT terminal (pages 15 and 21).
Is KURO LINK set to On on Set KURO LINK to On on the player (page 38).
the player?
Does the connected device • The KURO LINK function will not work with devices of other brands
support the KURO LINK
function?
that do not support the KURO LINK function, even when connected
using an HDMI cable.
• The KURO LINK function will not work if devices that do not support
the KURO LINK function are connected between the KURO LINK-
compatible device and the player.
• See About connections to components of other makes supporting the
KURO LINK function on page 15.
• Even when connected to a Pioneer product compatible with the
KURO LINK function, some of the functions may not work.
Also refer to the operating instructions of the connected device.
Is KURO LINK set to On on
the connected device?
Set KURO LINK to On on the connected device. The KURO LINK
function operates when KURO LINK is set to On for all devices
connected to the HDMI OUT terminal.
Once connections and settings of all the devices are finished, be sure
to check that the player’s picture is output to the Flat Screen TV. (Also
check after changing the connected devices and connecting and/or
disconnecting HDMI cables.) If the player’s picture is not being output
to the Flat Screen TV, the KURO LINK function may not work properly.
For details, refer to the operating instructions of the connected device.
Are multiple players
connected?
The KURO LINK function may not work if three or more players,
including this player, are connected by HDMI cable.
The input does not switch
automatically on the Flat
Screen TV and AV system (AV
receiver or amplifier, etc.)
when playback is started on
the player or the Home Menu
or Home Media Gallery is
displayed.
Is Display Power On set to Set Display Power On to On (page 38).
Off on the player?
Network
Problem
Check
Remedy
• BD-LIVE function
(connection to the Internet)
cannot be used.
Perform Connection Test (page 42). If “Network connection test
completed successfully.” is displayed, check the proxy server settings
(page 41). Also there may be a problem with the Internet connection.
Contact your Internet service provider.
• “Connection to the software
updating server failed” is
displayed when you try to
update the software.
“OK to grant network access
to BD applications?” is
displayed when a BD-LIVE
compatible disc is read.
This is displayed if the BD-ROM does not have valid BD-LIVE network
access approval. Select No if you do not want to authorize access to the
network.
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Problem
Check
Remedy
07
Software updating is slow.
Depending on the Internet connection and other conditions, some time
may be required to update the software.
• “WRT NG ****” is displayed
on the front panel display
during software updating.
(**** meaning any
The message is displayed when software updating has failed. Check
again whether it can be updated properly.
characters)
• “WRT FAILED” is displayed
on the front panel display
during software updating.
A message other than
“Network connection test
completed successfully” is
displayed when Connection
Test is performed.
Is “LAN cable not connected” Check that this player and Ethernet hub (or router with hub
displayed?
functionality) are properly connected.
• Is “IP address cannot be
obtained.” displayed?
• If the IP address is obtained using the DHCP server function, check
the setting is correct at the Display Network Configuration
(page 41). For details on the DHCP server function, see the operating
instructions of the Ethernet hub (or router with hub functionality).
• Is “No response from the
gateway.” displayed?
• Set the IP address manually.
Is “IP address is overlapped.” • Check the operation and settings of the DHCP server function of the
displayed?
Ethernet hub (or router with hub functionality). For details on the DHCP
server function, see the operating instructions of the Ethernet hub (or
router with hub functionality).
• If this player’s has been set manually, reset the IP address of this
player or other components.
Is the Ethernet hub (or router • Check the settings and operation the Ethernet hub (or router with hub
with hub functionality)
operating properly?
functionality). For details, see the operating instructions of the Ethernet
hub.
• Reboot the Ethernet hub (or router with hub functionality).
Others
Problem
Check
Remedy
The player’s power turns off Is Auto Power Off set to
automatically. On?
If Auto Power Off is set to On, the player’s power turns off
automatically if no operation is performed for over 30 minutes
(page 40).
Is Display Power Off set to The player’s power may turn off together with the power of the TV
On?
connected to the HDMI OUT terminal. If you do not want the player’s
power to turn off when the TV’s power is turned off, set Display Power
Off to Off (page 38).
The player’s power turns on Is KURO LINK set to On?
automatically.
The player’s power may turn on together with the power of the TV
connected to the HDMI OUT terminal. If you do not want the player’s
power to turn on when the TV’s power is turned on, set KURO LINK to
Off (page 38).
Player cannot be operated
with remote control.
Is an AV receiver or amplifier Operate with the remote control of the device connected to the
connected to the CONTROL CONTROL IN terminal.
IN terminal on the player’s
rear panel?
Are you operating the remote Operate from within 7 m of the remote control sensor.
control from a point too far
away from the player?
Are the batteries dead?
Replace the batteries (page 6).
Input of connected TV, and
AV system and HD AV
Converter switches
automatically.
Is KURO LINK set to On?
The input of the TV, and AV system (AV receiver or amplifier, etc.) and
HD AV Converter connected to the HDMI OUT terminal may
automatically switch to the player when playback starts on the player or
the menu screen (Home Media Gallery, etc.) is displayed. If you do not
want the inputs of the connected TV, and AV system (AV receiver or
amplifier, etc.) and HD AV Converter to switch automatically, set KURO
LINK to Off (page 38).
“Processing failed.” is
displayed.
If the message appears repeatedly, please ask your nearest Pioneer
authorized service center or your dealer to carry out repair work.
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Problem
Check
Remedy
07
Settings you have made have • Have you disconnected the Always press STANDBY/ON on the player’s front panel or
been cleared.
power cord while the player’s STANDBY/ON on the remote control and check that POWER OFF
power was on?
has turned off from the player’s front panel display before
disconnecting the power cord. Be particularly careful when the power
cord is connected to the AC outlet on another device because the
player turns off in conjunction with the device.
• Has there been a power
failure?
EXT does not light on the
player’s front panel display
when a USB (external
Is the external storage device • Turn the player’s power off, then turn the power back on.
properly connected?
• Turn the player’s power off, then reconnect the external storage
device (page 16).
storage) device is connected.
Are you using a USB cable
Use a USB cable with a length of 2 meters or less.
that is longer than 2 meters?
Is the power of the external Turn the player’s power off, then turn the external hard disk’s power on.
hard disk turned on?
Is the external storage device External storage device may not work if connected to the USB port via
connected to the USB port via a memory card reader or USB hub.
a memory card reader or USB
hub?
Does the external storage
device contain multiple
partitions?
External storage devices may not be recognized if they contain multiple
partitions.
Some external storage devices may not operate.
EXT flashes on the player’s Is the external storage device Turn the player’s power off, then disable the write-protection.
front panel display when a
USB(externalstorage)device
is connected.
write-protected?
Is the external storage
Only external storage devices with a FAT16 or FAT32 file system can be
device’s file system FAT16 or used. They may be usable if they are formatted from the player
FAT32?
(page 42).
Turn the player’s power off, then turn the power back on.
Component video output
Glossary
This video output terminal provides clearer pictures when
connected to a TV equipped with component inputs. Component
video signals consist of three signals, Y, PB and PR.
Angle (Multi angle)
Up to 9 camera angles can be recorded simultaneously on BD-
ROM or DVD-Video discs, letting you view the same scene from
different angles.
Deep Color
See About HDMI on page 13.
Default Gateway
AVCHD (Advanced Video Codec High
Definition)
See Playing DVDs on page 9.
A default gateway is a communication device such as a router
which passes data between networks. It is used to direct data to
networks on which the destination gateway is not explicitly
specified.
BDAV
Of the BD format, the Audio Visual Format Specifications for HD
digital broadcast recording is referred to as BDAV on this player
and in this operating instructions.
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol)
This protocol provides configuration parameters (IP address,
etc.) for computers and other devices connected to the network.
BD-J
See Playing BDs on page 8.
DivX
See Supported video file formats on page 9.
BD-LIVE
See Playing BDs on page 8.
DNS (Domain Name System)
This is a system for associating Internet host names with IP
addresses.
BDMV
Of the BD format, the Audio Visual Format Specifications
designed for pre-packaged high definition (HD) movie contents is
referred to as BDMV on this player and in this operating
instructions.
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital is an audio format to record the sound in up to 5.1
channels with a fraction of the amount of data as compared to
linear PCM audio signals.
BONUSVIEW
See Playing BDs on page 8.
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Dolby Digital Plus
MAC (Media Access Control) address
07
Dolby Digital Plus is an audio format for high-definition media.
Built on Dolby Digital, it combines the efficiency and flexibility to
provide high quality multi-channel audio. With BD-ROMs, up to
7.1 channels of digital sound can be recorded.
A hardware identification number assigned specifically to the
network device (LAN card, etc.).
MPEG (Moving Picture Experts Group)
The name of a family of standards used to encode video and
audio signals in a digital compressed format. The video encoding
Dolby TrueHD
Dolby TrueHD is an audio format using lossless coding. With BD- standards include MPEG-1 Video, MPEG-2 Video, MPEG-4 Visual,
ROMs, up to 8 channels can be recorded at 96 kHz/24 bits, or up
to 6 channels at 192 kHz/24 bits.
MPEG-4 AVC, etc. The audio encoding standards include MPEG-
1 Audio, MPEG-2 Audio, MPEG-2 AAC, etc.
DRM
Parental Lock
A technology for protecting copyrighted digital data. Digitized
videos, images and audio retain the same quality even when they
are copied or transferred repeatedly. DRM is a technology for
restricting the distribution or playback of such digital data
without the authorization of the copyright holder.
See Changing the Parental Lock level for viewing DVDs and
Changing the Age Restriction for viewing BD-ROMs on page 43.
Picture-in-Picture (P-in-P)
This is a function for superimposing a sub video on the main
video. Some BD-ROMs include secondary video, which can be
superimposed on the primary video.
DTS Digital Surround
DTS Digital Surround is an audio format to record 48 kHz/24 bits
audio signals in 5.1 channels.
Port number
This is a sub-address provided below the IP address for
simultaneously connecting to multiple parties during Internet
communications.
DTS-HD High Resolution Audio
DTS-HD High Resolution Audio is an audio format using lossy
coding. It can record 7.1 channels at 96 kHz/24 bits.
Progressive scan
DTS-HD Master Audio
With this method, one picture is consisted of a single picture,
without dividing it in two pictures. Progressive scan provides
clear pictures with no flicker, in particular for still pictures that
contain much text, graphics, or horizontal lines. Progressive scan
is indicated in this player and operating instructions by a “p” after
the resolution value (for example, 576p).
DTS-HD Master Audio is an audio format using lossless coding.
With BD-ROMs, 7.1 channels can be recorded at 96 kHz/24 bits,
or 5.1 channels at 192 kHz/24 bits.
Ethernet
A standard for local area networks (LANs) used to connect
multiple computers, etc. in the same location. This player
supports 100BASE-TX.
Proxy server
This is a relay server for ensuring fast access and safe
communications when connecting to the Internet from an
internal network.
Frames and fields
A frame is the unit for one of the still pictures which compose
motion pictures. One frame consists of a picture of odd lines and
a picture of even lines called fields in video signal with interlaced
scan method (576i, 1080i, etc.).
Region number
See About region numbers on page 9.
Secondary audio
HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia
Interface)
See About HDMI on page 13.
Some BD-ROMs include sub audio streams mixed with the main
audio stream. These sub audio streams are called “secondary
audio”. On some discs this secondary audio is recorded as the
audio for the secondary video.
Interactive audio
The audio signals recorded in the titles of BD-ROMs. They include
for example the clicking sound made when the menu screen is
operated.
Secondary video
Some BD-ROMs include sub videos superimposed on the main
videos using the Picture-in-Picture function. These sub videos are
called “secondary video”.
Interlaced scan
Subnet mask
With this method, one picture is displayed by scanning it twice.
The odd lines are displayed in the first pass, the even lines are
displayed in the second, to form a single picture (frame).
Interlaced scan is indicated in this player and operating
instructions by an “i” after the resolution value (for example, 576i).
This is used to identify which part of the IP address corresponds
to the subnet (a separately managed network). The subnet mask
is expressed as “255.255.255.0”.
USB(Universal Serial Bus)
USB is the industry standard for connecting peripherals to PCs.
IP address
An address that identifies a computer or other device connected
to the Internet or local area network. It is represented a number
in four sections.
VC-1
A video codec developed by Microsoft and standardized by the
Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE).
Some BDs include videos encoded in this codec.
Linear PCM
This is referred as the audio signals that are not compressed.
x.v.Color
See About HDMI on page 13.
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Specifications
07
Model
BDP-LX52
Type
Blu-ray Disc PLAYER
Rated voltage
Europe, Australia and New Zealand models: AC 220 V to 240 V
Others: AC 110 V to 240 V
50 Hz/60 Hz
Rated frequency
Power consumption
32 W
Power consumption (standby)
Weight
0.3 W
3.6 kg
External dimensions (including projecting parts)
Tolerable operating temperature
Tolerable operating humidity
HDMI
420 mm (W) x 83 mm (H) x 287 mm (D)
+5 °C to +35 °C
5 % to 85 % (no condensation)
1 set, 19-pin: 5 V, 250 mA
1 set, RCA jack: 1.0 Vp-p (75 Ω)
Video outputs
Video
Component video
1 set, RCA jacks:
Y: 1.0 Vp-p (75 Ω)
PB, PR: 0.7 Vp-p (75 Ω)
Audio outputs
2-channel (left/right)
Audio output level
Frequency response
1 set, RCA jacks
200 mVrms (1 kHz, –20 dB)
4 Hz to 88 kHz (192 kHz sampling)
1 set, Optical digital jack
1 set, Ethernet jack (100BASE-TX)
1 set, Minijack (3.5 ø)
Digital audio outputs Optical
LAN
Control
USB
Input
1 set, Type A
Note
• The specifications and design of this product are subject to change without notice.
®
• This product includes FontAvenue fonts licenced by NEC Corporation. FontAvenue is a registered trademark of
NEC Corporation.
63
En
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Contact information:
U.K.
Pioneer GB LTD.
Hollybush Hill, Stoke Poges Slough, Buckinghamshire SL2 4QP UNITED KINGDOM
0870 600 1539
Australia, New Zealand and other Oceania area
Pioneer Electronics Australia Pty Ltd
2211 Princes Highway, Mulgrave, VIC 3170, Australia
1800 988 268
Hong Kong
Pioneer (HK) Limited - Customer Service Center
Unit 2, 17/F, Vanta Industrial Centre, 21-33 Tai Lin Pai Road, Kwai Chung, Hong Kong
(852) 3583 3288
Singapore
Pioneer Electronics AsiaCentre Pte Ltd
253 Alexandra Road (Komoco Building)#04-01, Lobby 2 Singapore 159936
(65) 6472-7555
Malaysia
Pioneer Technology (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd
16th Floor, Menara Uni. Asia, 1008, Jalan Sultan Ismail 50250, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
(03) 2697-2920
Thailand
Pioneer Electronics (Thailand) CO.,LTD
91/1 Floor 1&7 Chaiyo Building, Rama 9 Road, Huaykwang District Bangkok 10320, Thailand
(662) 6439-444
Taiwan
Pioneer High Fidelity Taiwan Co. Ltd
13th Floor, No.44, Chung Shan North Road, Sec.2 Taipei, Taiwan
(886 2) 2521-3166
Indonesia
PT. Adab Alam Electronic
Jl. K.H. Zainul Arifin No. 13A Jakarta-Pusat Indonesia
(21) 6331-924
PIONEER CORPORATION
4-1, Meguro 1-Chome, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8654, Japan
PIONEER ELECTRONICS (USA) INC.
P.O. BOX 1540, Long Beach, California 90801-1540, U.S.A. TEL: (800) 421-1404
PIONEER ELECTRONICS OF CANADA, INC.
300 Allstate Parkway, Markham, Ontario L3R 0P2, Canada TEL: 1-877-283-5901, 905-479-4411
PIONEER EUROPE NV
Haven 1087, Keetberglaan 1, B-9120 Melsele, Belgium TEL: 03/570.05.11
PIONEER ELECTRONICS ASIACENTRE PTE. LTD.
253 Alexandra Road, #04-01, Singapore 159936 TEL: 65-6472-7555
PIONEER ELECTRONICS AUSTRALIA PTY. LTD.
178-184 Boundary Road, Braeside, Victoria 3195, Australia, TEL: (03) 9586-6300
PIONEER ELECTRONICS DE MEXICO S.A. DE C.V.
Blvd.Manuel Avila Camacho 138 10 piso Col.Lomas de Chapultepec, Mexico,D.F. 11000 TEL: 55-9178-4270
K002_B_En
Published by Pioneer Corporation.
Copyright © 2009 Pioneer Corporation.
All rights reserved.
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