light TOYOTA CAMRY 2009 XV40 / 8.G Navigation Manual
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OTHER FUNCTIONS
179
Depending on the position of the headlight
switch, the screen changes to the day
mode or night mode.
To display the screen in the day mode even
with the headlight switch on, touch “Day
Mode” on the adjustment screen for
brightness and contrast control.
If the screen is set in the day mode with the
headlight switch turned on, this condition is
memorized in the system even with the en-
gine turned off.
1. Push the “INFO” button.
2. Touch “Screen Setting”.
Screen setting
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OTHER FUNCTIONS
182
You can set a beep sound off.
1. Push the “INFO” button.
2. Touch “Beep Off”.
“Beep Off” is highlighted.
To switch the beep sound on, touch “Beep
Off” again. The language of the touch screen buttons,
pop−up messages and the voice guidance
can be changed.
1. Push the “INFO” button.
2. Touch “Language”.
Beep settingSelecting a language
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AUDIO SYSTEM
190
Touch them lightly and directly on the
screen.
The selected button is highlighted.
INFORMATION
If the system does not respond to a
touch of a touch screen button,
move your finger away from the
screen and then touch it again.
You cannot operate dimmed touch
screen buttons.
Wipe off fingerprints on the surface
of the display using a glass clean-
ing cloth.
Tone and balance
How good an audio program sounds to you
is largely determined by the mix of the
treble, midrange, and bass levels. In fact,
different kinds of music and vocal pro-
grams usually sound better with different
levels of treble, midrange, and bass.
A good balance of the left and right stereo
channels and of the front and rear sound
levels is also important.
Keep in mind that if you are listening to a
stereo recording or broadcast, changing
the right/left balance will increase the vol-
ume of one group of sounds while de-
creasing the volume of another.
1. Push the “AUDIO” button.
2. Touch “SOUND”.
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AUDIO SYSTEM
194
Presetting a station
1. Tune in the desired station.
2. Touch one of the channel selector
buttons (1 — 6) you want and hold it un-
til a beep is heard.
This sets the station to the touch screen
button and the frequency appears on the
touch screen button.
Each
radio mode can store up to 6 station-
s. To change the preset station to a differ-
ent one, follow the same procedure.
The preset station memory is cancelled
when the power source is interrupted by
battery disconnection or a blown fuse.
Selecting a station
Tune in the desired station using one of the
following methods.
Preset tuning: Touch the channel selec-
tor button (1 — 6) for the station you want.
The touch screen button is highlighted and
the station frequency appears on the
screen.
Seek tuning: Push the “
” or “” but-
ton of “SEEK·TRACK” . The radio will be-
gin seeking up or down for a station of the
nearest frequency and will stop on recep-
tion. Each time you push the button, the
stations will be searched automatically
one after another.
To scan all the frequencies: Touch
“SCAN” on the screen or push the
“SCAN” button briefly. “SCAN” appears
on the screen. The radio will find the next
station and stay there for a few seconds,
and then scan again. To select a station,
touch “SCAN” or push the “SCAN” but-
ton again.
To scan the preset stations: Touch
“SCAN” on the screen or push the
“SCAN” button for longer than approxi-
mately a second. “P·SCAN” appears on
the screen. The radio will tune in the next
preset station, stay there for a few se-
conds, and then move to the next preset
station. To select a station, touch “SCAN”
or push the “SCAN” button again.
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AUDIO SYSTEM
200
Selecting a channel
Tune in the desired channel using one of
the following methods.
Preset tuning: Touch the channel selec-
tor button (1 — 6) for the channel you want.
The button (1 — 6) is highlighted and chan-
nel number appears on the display.
To select channel within the current
category: Push the “
” or “” button of
“SEEK·TRACK” . The radio will step up or
down the channel within the current chan-
nel category. Touch “TYPE SEEK”. The
radio will step up the channel within the
current channel category.
To scan the currently selected channel
category: Touch “TYPE SCAN” or push
the “SCAN” button briefly. “SCAN” ap-
pears on the display. The radio will find the
next channel in the same channel catego-
ry, stay there for a few seconds, and then
scan again. To select a channel, touch
“TYPE SCAN” or push the “SCAN” but-
ton a second time.
To scan the preset channels: Push the
“SCAN” button and hold it until you hear
a beep. “P .SCAN” appears on the display.
The radio will find the next preset channel,
stay there for a few seconds, and then
move to the next preset channel. To select
a channel, push the “SCAN” button a sec-
ond time.
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AUDIO SYSTEM
207
(c) Playing a disc
Push the “DISC·AUX” button if the
discs are already loaded in the changer.
“CD CHANGER” appears on the screen.
The discs set in the changer are played
continuously, starting with the last disc you
inserted. The disc number of the disc cur-
rently being played, the track number and
the time from the beginning of the program
appear on the screen.
When play of one disc ends, the first track
of the following disc starts. When play of
the final disc ends, play of the first disc
starts again.
The changer will skip any empty disc trays. (d) Selecting a desired disc
Touch the desired disc number on the
screen.
The selected disc number is highlighted.
The changer will start playing the selected
disc from the first track.
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AUDIO SYSTEM
218
FM
Fading and drifting stations — General-
ly, the effective range of FM is about 40 km
(25 miles). Once outside this range, you
may notice fading and drifting, which in-
crease with the distance from the radio
transmitter. They are often accompanied
by distortion.
Multi path — FM signals are reflective,
making it possible for two signals to reach
your antenna at the same time. If this hap-
pens, 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 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 inter-
fere 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 broad-
cast.
Static — AM is easily affected by external
sources of electrical noise, such as high
tension power lines, lightening, or electri-
cal motors. This results in static. MP3/WMA files
MP3 (MPEG Audio Layer 3) and WMA
(Windows Media Audio) are audio
compression standards.
The MP3/WMA player can play MP3
and WMA files on CD
−ROM, CD−R
and CD −RW discs.
The unit can play disc recordings com-
patible with ISO 9660 level 1 and level
2 and with the Romeo and Joliet file
system.
When naming an MP3 or WMA file, add
the appropriate file extension (.mp3 or
.wma).
The MP3/WMA player plays back files
with .mp3 or .wma file extensions as
MP3 or WMA files. To prevent noise
and playback errors, use the appropri-
ate file extensions.
The player can play only the first ses-
sion using multi −session compatible
CDs.
MP3 files are compatible with the ID3
Tag Ver. 1.0, Ver. 1.1, Ver. 2.2, and Ver.
2.3 formats. The unit cannot display
disc title, track title and artist name in
other formats.
WMA files can contain a WMA tag that
is used in the same way as an ID3 tag.
WMA tags carry information such as
track title, artist name.
The emphasis function is available
only when playing MP3/WMA files re-
corded at 32, 44.1 and 48 kHz. (The
system can play MP3 files with sam-
pling frequencies of 16, 22.05, and 24
kHz. However, the emphasis function
is not available for files recorded at
these frequencies.)