ESP TOYOTA CAMRY 2009 XV40 / 8.G Navigation Manual
Page 4 of 230
BASIC FUNCTIONS
24
This system is operated mainly by the
touch screen buttons on the screen.
To prevent damage to the screen, light-
ly touch buttons on the screen with the
finger. When a button on the screen is
touched, a beep sounds.
Do not use objects other than the finger
to touch the screen.
INFORMATION
If the system does not respond to
a touch on a touch screen button,
move the finger away from the
screen and then touch it again.
Dimmed touch screen buttons
cannot be operated.
Wipe off fingerprints using a glass
cleaning cloth. Do not use chemi-
cal cleaners to clean the touch
screen.
The displayed image may become
darker and moving images may be
slightly distorted when the display
is cold.
Under extremely cold conditions,
the map may not be displayed and
the data input by a user may be de-
leted. Also, the touch screen but-
tons may be harder than usual to
depress.
When you look at the screen
through polarized material such as
polarized sunglasses, the screen
may be dark and hard to see. If so,
look at the screen from different
angles, adjust the screen settings
on the “Display” screen, or take off
your sunglasses.
When searching for an address or a name,
or entering a memo, letters and numbers
can be input via the touch screen.
INFORMATION
Keyboard layout can be changed.
(See page 108.)
Touch screen operation
Inputting letters and
numbers/List screen
operation
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DESTINATION SEARCH
41
8“Intersection”
The names of two intersecting streets can
be entered. This is helpful if only the gen-
eral vicinity, not the specific address, is
known. 58 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9“Freeway Ent./Exit”
The name of a freeway (interstate) en-
trance or exit can be entered. 59 . . . . . . .
10“?”
Function help for the “Destination” screen
can be viewed on this screen. 28 . . . . . . .
11“Change”
To change the search area, touch this but-
ton. 42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
12Quick access touch screen but-
tons
One of 5 preset destinations can be se-
lected by touching the screen directly. To
use this function, it is necessary to set the
“Quick Access” for each memory point.
(To register a “Quick Access”, see “ —
Editing memory points” on page 94.) 44
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13Home touch screen button
A personal home address can be selected
without entering the address each time. To
use this function, it is necessary to set
“Home” for the memory point. (To register
“Home”, see “ — Registering home” on
page 100.) 44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14“Phone #”
A destination can be entered by the tele-
phone number. 60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
15“Coordinates”
A destination can be set by using latitude
and longitude as coordinates. 60 . . . . . . .
Push the “DEST” button.
You can use one of 13 different methods to
search your destination. (See pages 44
through 61.)
INFORMATION
When searching the destination, the
response to the touch screen button
may be slow.
Destination search —
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DESTINATION SEARCH
46
3. When the desired street name is
found, touch the corresponding but-
ton.
The screen changes and displays the map
location of the selected destination and the
route preference. (See “Starting route
guidance” on page 61.)
If the same address exists in more than
one city, the current screen changes to the
city list screen.
4. Select or enter the desired city.
“Input Name”: To narrow down the listed
items by inputting the city name.
If inputting a street name first, the screen
changes. The house number can then be
input.
If the above screen appears, an address
range on the screen can be selected.
If the same address exists in more than
one city, the current screen changes to the
city list screen.
Page 109 of 230
OTHER FUNCTIONS
129
4Indicates the level of reception.
Too bad Excellent
The level of reception does not always cor-
respond with the one of your cellular
phone.
INFORMATION
This system supports the following
service.
HFP (Hands Free Profile) Ver. 1.0
OPP (Object Push Profile) Ver. 1.1
If your cellular phone does not
support HFP, you cannot enter the
Bluetooth phone, and take OPP
service individually.
An antenna for the Bluetooth connec-
tion is built in the display. The indica-
tion of the Bluetooth connection may
turn yellow and the system may not
function when you use the Bluetooth
phone in the following conditions and
places.
Your cellular phone is hiding behind the
display (behind the seat or in the glove box and console box).
Your cellular phone touches or is
covered with metal materials.
Leave the Bluetooth phone on the place
where “Blue” indication is displayed.
Bluetooth is a trademark owned by
Bluetooth SIG, Inc.
When you release your car:
A lot of personal data is registered
when you use the Hands free system.
When you release your car, initialize
your data. (See “(c) Delete personal
data” on page 181.)
If you initialize it, the former state will never
come back again. Pay much attention
when initializing the data.
You can initialize the following data in the
system.
Phone book data
Dialed numbers and received calls
Speed dial
Bluetooth phone data
Security code
Page 154 of 230
OTHER FUNCTIONS
174
The speech command system enables
you to operate the navigation system
and audio system by giving a com-
mand.
Type A
Type B
1. Push the talk switch.
A beep sounds and on screen message is
displayed with an indicator at the top left.
2. Say a command while the indicator
is shown on the display.
If you want to check the command list,
touch “Help” to display the help screen.
(See “Help screen” on page 177.) When
you touch “Cancel”, the previous
screen returns.
If the navigation system does not respond
or the confirmation screen does not disap-
pear, please push the talk switch and try
again.
If no command is given, a beep sounds
and the indicator disappears 6 seconds
later.
If the system does not recognize your
speech, the system will respond with this
message (“System does not recognize
this command, please rephrase your com-
mand.”). Start the operation from the be-
ginning.
Speech command system
Page 167 of 230
AUDIO SYSTEM
187
This section describes some of the basic
features of your audio system. Some in-
formation may not pertain to your system.
Vehicles with smart key system —
Your audio system works when the “EN-
GINE START STOP” switch is in ACCES-
SORY or IGNITION ON mode.
Vehicles without smart key system —
Your audio system works when the engine
switch is in “ACC” or “ON” position.
NOTICE
To prevent the battery from being dis-
charged, do not leave the audio sys-
tem on longer than necessary when
the engine is not running.
CAUTION
For vehicles sold in U.S.A. and
Canada:
Part 15 of the FCC Rules
FCC Warning:
Changes or modifications in con-
struction not expressly approved by
the party responsible for compliance
could void the user’s authority to op-
erate the equipment. Radio frequen-
cy exposure. This device is approved
for Mobile Application only and, to
comply with applicable FCC radio fre-
quency exposure regulations, must
be used with a distance of at least 7.9
in. (20 cm) between the antenna and
the body of any person at all time dur-
ing use.
Laser products
Do not take this unit apart or
attempt to make any changes
yourself. This is an intricate
unit that uses a laser pickup to
retrieve information from the
surface of compact discs. The
laser is carefully shielded so
that its rays remain inside the
cabinet. Therefore, never try to
disassemble the player or alter
any of its parts since you may
be exposed to laser rays and
dangerous voltages.
This product utilizes a laser.
Use of controls or adjustments
or performance of procedures
other than those specified
herein may result in hazardous
radiation exposure.
Using your audio system —
— Some basics
Page 170 of 230
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”.
Page 177 of 230
AUDIO SYSTEM
197
Traffic announcement
“TRAF”
The tuner automatically seeks a station
that regularly broadcasts traffic informa-
tion.
When you touch “TRAF”
, “TRAF SEEK”
appears on the display, and the radio will
start seeking any station broadcasting traf-
fic program information.
If no traffic program station is found,
“NOTHING” appears on the display.
Traffic information may not be broad-
casted when searching.
If a traffic program station is found, the
name for traffic program station is dis-
played for a while until a traffic announce-
ment is received. To listen to a satellite radio broadcast in
your
vehicle, an additional genuine T oyota
satellite receiver and antenna must be pur-
chased an d installed, and the subscription
to the XM Satellite Radio is necessary.
How to subscribe to an XM Satellite
Radio
An XM Satellite Radio is a tuner designed
exclusively to receive broadcasts provided
under a separate subscription.
How to subscribe:
You must enter into a separate service
agreement with the XM Satellite Radio in
order to receive satellite broadcast pro-
gramming in the vehicle. Additional activa-
tion and service subscription fees apply
that are not included in the purchase price
of the vehicle and optional digital satellite
tuner.
For detailed information about XM Satel-
lite Radio or to subscribe:
U.S.A.—
Visit on the web at www.xmradio.com
or
call 1 −800− 967−2346.
Canada—
Visit on the web at www .xmradio.ca
or call
1−877−438−9677.
The XM Satellite Radio is solely responsi-
ble for the quality, availability and content
of the satellite radio services provided,
which are subject to the terms and condi-
tions of the XM Satellite Radio customer
service agreement.
Customers should have their radio ID
ready; the r adio ID can be found by select-
ing “channel 000” on the radio. For details,
see the “Displaying the radio ID” that fol-
lows.
All fees and programming are the respon-
sibility of the XM Satellite Radio and are
subject to change.
— Radio operation
(XM Satellite Radio
broadcast)
Page 183 of 230
AUDIO SYSTEM
203
NOTICE
This equipment has been tested and
found to comply with the limits for a
class B digital device, pursuant to
Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These lim-
its are designed to provide reason-
able protection against harmful inter-
ference in a residential installation.
This equipment generates, uses and
can radiate radio frequency energy
and, if not installed and used in ac-
cordance with the instructions, may
cause harmful interference to radio
communications. However, there is
no guarantee that interference will
not occur in a particular installation.
If this equipment does cause harmful
interference to radio or television re-
ception, which can be determined by
turning the equipment off and on, the
user is encouraged to try to correct
the interference by one or more of the
following measures:
— Reorient or relocate the receiving
antenna.
— Increase the separation between
the equipment and receiver.
— Connect the equipment into an
outlet on a circuit different from that
to which the receiver is connected.
— Consult the dealer or an experi-
enced radio/TV technician for help.
Information to user
Alternation or modifications carried
out without appropriate authoriza-
tion may invalidate the user’s right to
operate the equipment.
INFORMATION
This XM tuner supports “Audio Ser-
vices” (Music and Talk) of only XM
Satellite Radio and “Text Informa-
tion”* linked to the respective “Audio
Services”.
*Text Information includes, Station
Name, (Artist) Name, (Song) Title and
Category Name.
Page 198 of 230
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.)