122USB portUSB portGeneral information...................122
Playing saved audio files ...........123General information
In the centre console in front of the
gearshift lever there is an USB socket
for the connection of external audio
data sources.
Notice
The socket must always be kept
clean and dry.
An MP3 player, USB drive, SD card
(via USB connector/adapter), or iPod
can be connected to the USB port.
When connected to the USB port,
various functions of the above
devices can be operated via the
controls and menus of the
Infotainment system.
Notice
Not all MP3 player, USB drive and
iPod models are supported by the
Infotainment system.
Important information ■ The external devices connected to the USB port must comply with the
USB Mass Storage Class
specification (USB MSC).
■ Devices connected via USB are supported according to USB
Specification V 2.0. Maximum
supported speed: 12 Mbit/s.
■ Only devices with a FAT16/FAT32 file system are supported.
■ Only the first partition on a connected USB drive is recognisedby the system.
The size of that partition shall not be greater than 250 GB. Greater size
(up to 1000 GB) may be supported
but that is not guaranteed.
148CD PlayerCD PlayerGeneral information...................148
Usage ........................................ 149General information
With the CD player you can play
standard commercial CDs with a
diameter of 12 cm.Caution
Under no circumstances place
DVDs, single-CDs with a diameter
of 8 cm or shaped CDs in the audio
player.
You must not put any stickers on
CDs. These discs can get jammed
in the CD drive and ruin the drive.
An expensive replacement of the
device will then be necessary.
■ The format of the CD must be ISO 9660 Level 1, Level 2 or
JOLIET. All other formats cannot be played back reliably.
■ Audio CDs with copy protection, which are not in compliance with
the audio CD standard, may not
play correctly or not at all.
■ You can also use the Infotainment system to play CDs containing MP3
music data and Mixed Mode CDs.
■ Self-recorded CD-Rs and CD-RWs
are more vulnerable to mishandling
than prerecorded CDs. Correct
handling, especially in the case of
self-recorded CD-Rs and CD-RWs, must be ensured. See below.
■ Self-recorded CD-Rs and CD-RWs
may not play correctly or not at all.
In such cases it is not the
equipment that is at fault.
■ Avoid leaving fingerprints when you
change CDs.
■ Put CDs back in their sleeves immediately after removing them
from the CD player in order to
protect them from damage and dirt.
■ Dirt and liquids on CDs can smear the lens of the CD player inside the
device and cause faults.
■ Protect CDs from heat and direct sunlight.
■ The following restrictions apply for data stored on an MP3 CD:
When naming albums and tracks,
umlauts or special characters
should not be included.