ESP lexus LC500 2018 Navigation Manual

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3-3. Route guidance
Navigation system
1A short while later after the “MAP”
button is pressed, the display auto-
matically switches to map screen.
( P.69)
2 Select on the map.
3 Select “Pause guidance”.
 The route guidance can be
restarted by selecting “Resume
guidance”.
During route guidance, the route to the
destination can be checked and edited.
1 A short while later after the “MAP”
button is pressed, the display auto-
matically switches to map screen.
( P.69)
2 Select the on the map.
3 Select “Route”.
4 Select the items to be set.
When a destination is set
Select to display the three route
calculation methods. Select the
desired item to adjust the route
preferences. ( P.91)
Select to display the avoidance cri-
teria.
Select the desired item to adjust the
WARNING
●Be sure to obey the traffic regulations and keep the road condition in mind especially when you are driving on IPD
roads (roads that are not completely digitized in our database). The route guidance may not have the updated
information such as the direction of a one way street.
Pausing route guidance
Editing route
Displaying the edit route screen
A
B

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4-5. Setup
0515Esperanto
0520Estonian
0521Basque
0601Persian
0609Finnish
0610Fiji
0615Faroese
0625Frisian
0701Irish
0704Scottish-Gaelic
0712Galician
0714Guarani
0721Gujarati
0801Hausa
0809Hindi
0818Croatian
0821Hungarian
0825Armenian
0901Interlingua
0905Interlingue
0911Inupiak
0914Indonesian
0919Icelandic
0923Hebrew
1009Yiddish
1023Javanese
1101Georgian
1111Kazakh
CodeLanguage
1112Greenlandic
1113Cambodian
1114Kannada
1119Kashmiri
1121Kurdish
1125Kirghiz
1201Latin
1214Lingala
1215Laotian
1220Lithuanian
1222Latvian,
Lettish
1307Malagasy
1309Maori
1311Macedonian
1312Malayalam
1314Mongolian
1315Moldavian
1318Marathi
1319Malay
1320Maltese
1325Burmese
1401Nauru
1405Nepali
1415Norwegian
1503Occitan
1513(Afan) Oromo
1518Oriya
CodeLanguage

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
4-6.Tips for operating the audio/visual system
●The use of a cellular phone inside or near the vehicle may cause a noise from the speakers of the audio/visual system
which you are listening to. However, this does not indicate a malfunction.
Usually, a problem with radio reception
does not mean there is a problem with
the radio  it is just the normal result
of conditions outside the vehicle.
For example, nearby buildings and ter-
rain can interfere with FM reception.
Power lines or phone wires can inter-
fere with AM signals. And of course,
radio signals have a limited range. The
farther the vehicle is from a station, the
weaker its signal will be. In addition,
reception conditions change con-
stantly as the vehicle moves.
Here, some common reception prob-
lems that probably do not indicate a
problem with the radio are described.
■FM
Fading and drifting stations: Generally,
the effective range of FM is about 40
km (25 miles). Once outside this
range, you may notice fading and drift-
ing, which increase with the distance
from the radio transmitter. They are
often accompanied by distortion.
Multi-path: FM signals are reflective,
making it possible for 2 signals to reach
the vehicle’s antenna 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
signals are blocked by buildings, trees
or other large objects. Increasing the
bass level may reduce static and flut-
tering.
Station swapping: If the FM signal
being listened to is interrupted or
weakened, and there is another strong
station nearby on the FM band, the
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
signal 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
Operating information
NOTICE
●To avoid damage to the audio/visual
system:
• Be careful not to spill beverages over
the audio/visual system.
• Do not put anything other than an
appropriate disc into the disc slot.
Radio

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
Special shaped discs
Transparent/translucent discs
Low quality discs
Labeled discs
 Handle discs carefully, especially
when inserting them. Hold them on
the edge and do not bend them.
Avoid getting fingerprints on them,
particularly on the shiny side.
 Dirt, scratches, warping, pin holes
or other disc damage could cause
the player to skip or to repeat a sec-
tion of a track. (To see a pin hole,
hold the disc up to the light.)
 Remove discs from the players
when not in use. Store them in their
plastic cases away from moisture,
NOTICE
●Do not use special shaped, transpar- ent/translucent, low quality or labeled discs such as those shown in the illus-
trations. The use of such discs may damage the player, or it may be impos-sible to eject the disc.
●This system is not designed for use of
Dual Discs. Do not use Dual Discs because they may cause damage to the player.
●Do not use discs with a protection ring.
The use of such discs may damage the player, or it may be impossible to eject the disc.
●Do not use printable discs. The use of
such discs may damage the player, or it may be impossible to eject the disc.

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
Audio/visual system
PCM, Dolby Digital and MPEG audio
format DVDs. Other decoded types
cannot be played.
Title and chapter: Video and audio pro-
grams stored in DVD video discs are
divided into parts by title and chapter.
Title: The largest unit of the video and
audio programs stored on DVD video
discs. Usually, one movie, one album,
or one audio program is assigned as a
title.
Chapter: A unit smaller than that of
title. A title comprises of several chap-
ters.
■Certification
●Manufactured under license from Dolby Laboratories. Dolby, Dolby Audio, and
the double-D symbol are trademarks of Dolby Laboratories.
■Certification
 “Made for iPod” and “Made for
iPhone” mean that an electronic
accessory has been designed to
connect specifically to iPod or
iPhone, respectively, and has been
certified by the developer to meet
Apple performance standards.
 Apple is not responsible for the
operation of this device or its com-
pliance with safety and regulatory
standards. Please note that the use
of this accessory with iPod or
iPhone, may affect wireless perfor-
mance.
 iPhone, iPod, iPod nano, and iPod
touch are trademarks of Apple Inc.,
registered in the U.S. and other
countries. Lightning is a trademark
of Apple Inc.
 The Lightning connector works with
iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone
SE, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone
5s, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5, iPod touch
(5th and 6th generation), and iPod
nano (7th generation).
 The 30-pin connector works with
iPhone 4s, iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS,
iPhone 3G, iPhone, iPod touch (1st
through 4th genera tion), and iPod
nano (1st through 6th generation).
 USB works with iPhone 6s Plus,
iPhone 6s, iPhone SE, iPhone 6
Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone 5s, iPhone
5c, iPhone 5, iPhone 4s, iPhone 4,
iPhone 3GS, iPhone 3G, iPod
touch (1st through 6th generation),
and iPod nano (1st through 7th gen-
eration).
 Bluetooth® technology works with
iPhone SE, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone
6s, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone
5s, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5, iPhone 4s,
iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 3G,
and iPod touch (2nd through 6th
generation), and iPod nano (7th
iPod

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
generation).
■Compatible models
The following iPod®, iPod nano®, iPod
touch® and iPhone® devices can be
used with this system.
Made for
• iPod touch (6th generation)
• iPod touch (5th generation)
• iPod touch (4th generation)
• iPod touch (3rd generation)
• iPod touch (2nd generation)
• iPod touch (1st generation)
• iPod nano (7th generation)
• iPod nano (6th generation)
• iPod nano (5th generation)
• iPod nano (4th generation)
• iPhone 6s Plus
•iPhone 6s
•iPhone SE
• iPhone 6 Plus
•iPhone 6
•iPhone 5s
•iPhone 5c
•iPhone 5
•iPhone 4s
•iPhone 4
•iPhone 3GS
•iPhone 3G
●Depending on differences between mod- els or software versions etc., some mod-
els might be incompatible with this system.
This device supports high-resolution
sound sources.
Supported formats and playable media
are as follows.
■Supported formats
WAV, FLAC, ALAC, OGG Vorbis
■Playable media
USB
■Compatible file format (audio)
■Compatible file format (video)
■Folders in the deviceHigh-resolution sound source
File information
Compatible USB devices
USB communica-
tion formats
USB 2.0 HS (480
Mbps)
File formatsFAT 16/32
Correspondence
classMass storage class
Compatible audio format
Compatible compressed files
USBDISC
MP3/WMA/AAC/
WAV(LPCM)/FLA
C/ALAC/OGG
Vorbis
MP3/WMA/AAC
USBDISC
WMV/AVI/MP4/M
4V-
USBDISC
Maximum 3000Maximum 192

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
Audio/visual system
■Files in the device
■Files per folder
*1: Only compatible with Windows Media
Audio Standard
*2: Sound source of 48kHz or more is
down-converted to 48kHz/24bit.
*1: Variable Bit Rate (VBR) compatible
*2: Only compatible with Windows Media
Audio Standard
USBDISC
Maximum 9999Maximum 255
USBDISC
Maximum 255-
Corresponding sampling frequency
File typeFrequency (kHz)
MP3 files:
MPEG 1 LAYER 332/44.1/48
MP3 files:
MPEG 2 LSF
LAYER 3
16/22.05/24
WMA files:
Ver. 7, 8, 9*1
(9.1/9.2)
32/44.1/48
AAC files:
MPEG4/AAC-LC
11.025/12/16/22.0
5/24/32/44.1/48
WAV (LPCM)
files*2
8/11.025/12/16/22
.05/24/32/44.1/4
8/88.2/96/176.4/
192
FLAC*2
8/11.025/12/16/22
.05/24/32/44.1/4
8/88.2/96/176.4/
192
ALAC*28/11.025/12/16/22
.05/24/32/44.1/4
8/64/88.2/96
OGG Vorbis*28/11.025/16/22.05
/32/44.1/48
Corresponding bit rates*1
File typeBit rate (kbps)
MP3 files:
MPEG 1 LAYER 332 - 320
MP3 files:
MPEG 2 LSF
LAYER 3
8 - 160
WMA files: Ver. 7, 8CBR 48 - 192
WMA files:
Ver. 9*2 (9.1/9.2)CBR 48 - 320
AAC files:
MPEG4/AAC-LC8 - 320
OGG Vorbis32-500
File typeQuantization bit
rate (bit)
WAV(LPCM) files
16/24FLAC
ALAC
Compatible channel modes
File typeChannel mode
MP3 files
Stereo, joint stereo,
dual channel and
monaural

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
MP3 (MPEG Audio Layer 3),
WMA (Windows Media Audio) and
AAC (Advanced Audio Coding)
are audio compression standards.
 This system can play
MP3/WMA/AAC files on CD-
R/CD-RW/DVD-R/DVD-RW
discs and USB memory.
 This system can play disc recordings
compatible with ISO 9660 level 1
and level 2 and with the Romeo and
Joliet file system and UDF (2.01 or
lower).
 When naming an
MP3/WMA/AAC file, add an
appropriate file extension
(.mp3/.wma/.m4a).
 This system plays back files with
.mp3/.wma/.m4a file extensions as
MP3/WMA/AAC files respectively.
To prevent noise and playback
errors, use the appropriate file
extension.
 This system can play only the first
session/border when using multi
session/border compatible discs.
 MP3 files are compatible with the
ID3 Tag Ver. 1.0, Ver. 1.1, Ver. 2.2 and
Ver. 2.3 formats. This system cannot
display disc title, track title and artist
name in other formats.
 WMA/AAC files can contain a
WMA/AAC tag that is used in the
same way as an ID3 tag.
WMA/AAC tags carry information
such as track title and artist name.
 The emphasis function is available
only when playing MP3 files.
 This system can play back AAC files
encoded by iTunes.
 m3u playlists are not compatible
with the audio player.
 MP3i (MP3 interactive) and MP3-
PRO formats are not compatible
with the audio player.
 The player is compatible with VBR
(Variable Bit Rate).
 When playing back files recorded
as VBR (Variable Bit Rate) files, the
play time will not be correctly dis-
played if the fast forward or reverse
operations are used.
 It is not possible to check folders
that do not include
MP3/WMA/AAC files.
 MP3/WMA/AAC files in folders up
to 8 levels deep can be played.
However, the start of playback may
be delayed when using discs con-
taining numerous levels of folders.
For this reason, we recommend cre-
ating discs with no more than 2 lev-
els of folders.
WMA files2ch
AAC files1ch, 2ch (Dual chan-
nel is not supported)
File typeChannel mode

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
Audio/visual system
The play order of the compact disc
with the structure shown above is as
follows:
 The order changes depending on
the personal computer and
MP3/WMA/AAC encoding soft-
ware you use.
Compatible video format
FormatCodec
MPEG-4
Video codec:
 H.264|MPEG-4
AVC
 MPEG4
Audio codec:
 AAC
 MP3
Corresponding
screen size:
 MAX
1920 1080
Corresponding
frame rate:
 MAX 60i/30p

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4-6. Tips for operating the audio/visual system
■Packet write
 This is a general term that describes
the process of writing data on-
demand to CD-R, etc., in the same
way that data is written to floppy or
hard discs.
■ID3 tag
 This is a method of embedding
track-related information in an MP3
file. This embedded information can
include the track number, track title,
the artist’s name, the album title, the
music genre, the year of production,
comments, cover art and other data.
The contents can be freely edited
using software with ID3 tag editing
functions. Although the tags are
restricted to a number of charac-
ters, the information can be viewed
when the track is played back.
■WMA tag
 WMA files can contain a WMA tag
that is used in the same way as an
ID3 tag. WMA tags carry informa-
tion such as track title and artist
name.
■ISO 9660 format
 This is the international standard for
the formatting of CD-ROM folders
and files. For the ISO 9660 format,
there are 2 levels of regulations.
 Level 1: The file name is in 8.3 for-
mat (8 character file names, with a 3
character file extension. File names
must be composed of one-byte cap-
AVI Container
Video codec:
 H.264|MPEG-4
AVC
 MPEG4
 WMV9
 WMV9
Advanced profile
Audio codec:
 AAC
 MP3
 WMA9.2
(7,8,9.1,9.2)
Corresponding
screen size:
 MAX
1920 1080
Corresponding
frame rate:
 MAX 60i/30p
Windows Media
Video
Video codec:
 WMV9
 WMV9
Advanced profile
Audio codec:
 WMA9.2
(7,8,9.1,9.2)
Corresponding
screen size:
 MAX
1920 1080
Corresponding
frame rate:
 MAX 60i/30p
FormatCodecTerms

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