2006 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO Owners Manual

Page 193 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual Create a folder structure that makes it easy to �nd
songs while driving. Organize songs by albums using
one folder for each album. Each folder or album
should contain 18 songs or less.
Avoid subfold

Page 194 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual No Folder
When the CD-R contains only compressed �les, the
�les will be located under the root folder. The next and
previous folder functions will not be displayed on a
CD-R that was recorded without

Page 195 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual Playing an MP3
Insert a CD-R partway into the slot (Single CD Player),
or press the load button and wait for the message to
insert disc (Six-Disc CD Player), label side up. The
player will pull it in,

Page 196 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual f(Tune):Turn this knob to select MP3 �les on the
CD-R currently playing.
©SEEK¨:Press the left SEEK arrow to go to the
start of the current MP3 �le, if more than ten seconds
have played. Press the r

Page 197 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual Once the disc has been scanned, the player will default
to playing MP3 �les in order by artist. The current artist
playing is shown on the second line of the display
between the arrows. Once all songs

Page 198 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual If any error occurs repeatedly or if an error cannot be
corrected, contact your dealer. If the radio displays
an error message, write it down and provide it to your
dealer while reporting the problem.

Page 199 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual Audio Steering Wheel Controls
The audio steering wheel
controls may be different
depending on your
vehicles options. Some
audio controls can
be adjusted at the steering
wheel. They include the
followi

Page 200 of 392

CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO 2006 6.G Owners Manual FM Stereo
FM stereo will give the best sound, but FM signals will
reach only about 10 to 40 miles (16 to 65 km). Tall
buildings or hills can interfere with FM signals, causing
the sound to fade in and