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91
5. Touch the switch corresponding to the
desired category. Then touch the
“OK”switch.
Delete previous point
You can delete your previous destination.
1. Push the
“MENU” button.
2. Touch the “Setup” switch. Then
touch
switch twice to display page 3 of
the “Setup” screen.
3. Touch the “Delete” switch of “Pre-
vious Point”.
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99
After you input the dealer, the screen changes
and displays the map location of the dealer.
If it is OK, touch the
“Enter” switch.
The screen changes to “Edit Dealer” screen.
(See “(b) Edit dealer”.)
(b) Edit dealer
You can edit the dealer name, staff, loca-
tion and phone number.
1. Touch the
“Set Dealer” switch on
the “Maintenance” screen. The “Edit
Dealer” screen appears.
2. To edit, touch the corresponding
switch.
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105
Touch your desired color for the date.
You can set a color of the mark and/or date
for the date you added the memo and/or
location.
To default the date color, touch the
“De-
lete”
switch on the screen. After you
choose the date and/or mark color, touch
the
“OK” switch to display the previous
screen.
(b) Adding a memo
To add a memo, touch the corresponding
date.
The “Memo” screen appears on the dis-
play. Touch the
“Add Memo” switch.
(See page 102 for inputting a memo.)
You can add up to 100 memos.
(c) Deleting a memo
Touch the corresponding date. Touch the
corresponding memo switch, and then
touch the
“Delete” switch on the screen.
A message appears on the display. To de-
lete, touch the
“Yes” switch. To cancel
the deletion, touch the
“No” switch.
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106
(d) Editing a memo
To edit a memo, touch the corresponding
date, and then touch the memo you wish to
edit.
Touch the “Memo” or “Location”
switch.
(e) Memo list
1. To list the memos you added, touch the“List” switch.
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108
To edit: Touch the corresponding “Memo”
or “Location” switch. (See page 106 for
details.)
To delete: Touch the
“Delete” switch.
(See page 105 for details.)
Screen adjustment
The brightness or contrast of the screen
can be adjusted depending on the bright-
ness of your surroundings. You can also
turn the display off.
To display the “Display” screen push the
“DISPLAY” button.
Contrast and brightness adjustment
“CONTRAST” “+”:
Strengthens the contrast of the screen.
“CONTRAST” “ ”:
Weakens the contrast of the screen.
“BRIGHTNESS” “+”:
Brightens the screen.
“BRIGHTNESS” “ ”:
Darkens the screen.
After adjusting the screen, touch the
“OK” switch.The screen goes off when you touch the
“SCREEN OFF” switch. To turn the dis-
play screen back on, push any button such as
“INFO”, etc. The selected screen appears.
INFORMATION
When you do not touch any switch on
the screen for 20 seconds the “Display”
screen goes off.
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11 4
Push “AM”, “FM” or “DISC” button to turn
on the desired mode. The selected mode
turns on immediately.
Push these buttons if you want to switch from
one mode to another.
If the disc is not set, the compact disc player
does not turn on.
You can turn off the compact disc player by
ejecting the compact disc. If the audio system
was previously off, then the entire audio sys-
tem will be turned off when you eject the com-
pact disc. If the other function was previously
playing, it will come on again.
The switches for radio, compact disc play-
er and DVD player operation are displayed
on the function switch display screen
when the audio control mode is selected.
Touch them lightly and directly on the
screen.
The selected switch is highlighted in green or
yellow.
INFORMATION
If the system does not respond to a
touch of a switch, move your finger
away from the screen and then touch
it again.
You cannot operate dimmed
switches.
Wipe off fingerprints on the surface of
the display using a glass cleaning
cloth.
Page 143 of 152
133 ENTER SUBTITLE LANGUAGE CODE
If you touch “Others” on the “Select Audio
Language” screen, “Select Subtitle
Lang.” screen or “Select DVD Language”
screen, you can select the language you
want to hear or read by entering a lan-
guage code.
1. Enter the 4 digit language code.
If you enter the wrong numbers, touch
“Clear” to delete the numbers.
2. Touch “Enter”.
Code
Language
1001Japanese
0514English
0618French
0405German
0920Italian
0519Spanish
2608Chinese
1412Dutch
1620Portuguese
1922Swedish
1821Russian
111 5Korean
0512Greek
0101Afar
0102Abkhazian
0106Afrikaans
0113Amharic
0118Arabic
0119Assamese
0125Aymara
0126Azerbaijani
0201Bashkir
0205Byelorussian
0207Bulgarian
0208Bihari
0209Bislama
0214Bengali
0215Tibetan
0218Breton
0301Catalan
0315Corsican
0319Czach
0325Welsh
0401Danish
0426Bhutani
0515Esperanto
0520Estonian
0521Basque
0601Persian
0609Finnish
0610Fiji
0615Faroese
0625Frisian
0701Irish
0704Scots−Gaelic
0712Galician
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139
Audio system operating hints
NOTICE
To ensure correct audio system opera-
tions:
Be careful not to spill beverages over
the audio system.
Do not put anything other than a
Compact Disc into the slot.
Do not put anything other than an ap-
propriate disc into the DVD player.
The use of a cellular phone inside or
near the vehicle may cause a noise
from the speakers of the audio sys-
tem which you are listening to. How-
ever, this does not indicate a mal-
function.
RADIO RECEPTION
Usually, a problem with radio reception does
not mean there is a problem with your radio —
it is just the normal result of conditions outside
the vehicle.For example, nearby buildings and terrain
can interfere with FM reception. Power lines
or telephone wires can interfere with AM sig-
nals. And of course, radio signals have a lim-
ited range. The farther you are from a station,
the weaker its signal will be. In addition, re-
ception conditions change constantly as your
vehicle moves.
Here are some common reception problems
that probably do not indicate a problem with
your radio:
FM
Fading and drifting stations — Generally, the
effective range of FM is about 40 km (25
miles). Once outside this range, you may no-
tice fading and drifting, which increase with
the distance from the radio transmitter. They
are often accompanied by distortion.
Multi−path — FM signals are reflective, mak-
ing it possible for two signals to reach your an-
tenna at the same time. If this happens, the
signals will cancel each other out, causing a
momentary flutter or loss of reception.
Static and fluttering — These occur when sig-
nals are blocked by buildings, trees, or other
large objects. Increasing the bass level may
reduce static and fluttering.Station swapping — If the FM signal you are
listening to is interrupted or weakened, and
there is another strong station nearby on the
FM band, your radio may tune in the second
station until the original signal can be picked
up again.
AM
Fading — AM broadcasts are reflected by the
upper atmosphere — especially at night.
These reflected signals can interfere with
those received directly from the radio station,
causing the radio station to sound alternately
strong and weak.
Station interference — When a reflected sig-
nal and a signal received directly from a radio
station are very nearly the same frequency,
they can interfere with each other, making it
difficult to hear the broadcast.
Static — AM is easily affected by external
sources of electrical noise, such as high ten-
sion power lines, lightening, or electrical mo-
tors. This results in static.