Chapter 7: Picture and sound controls
47
Picture Size
Native
(for 480i (HDMI), 480p (HDMI), 720p, 1080i, and
1080p signal programs)
•
If receiving a 1080i, 1080p, 720p, 480i (HDMI),
or 480p (HDMI) signal program, the video is
scaled to display the entire picture within the
borders of the screen (i.e. no overscanning).
•
This is especially useful for external HD sources
such as DVHS movies, Video Games, or PC
graphics.
•
None of the picture is hidden.
Note:
•
This mode is supported only for HDMI (1080i,
1080p, 720p, 480i, and 480p), ColorStream
®
(1080i
and 720p), and ANT/CABLE (digital) inputs (1080i,
1080p, and 720p).
•
Depending on the input signal, the picture’s border
may be hidden, displayed in black, or noisy.
4:3
Some program formats will display with sidebars
and/or bars at the top and bottom.
Full
(for 16:9 [480i, 480p] source programs only)
If receiving a squeezed 4:3 format program, the
picture is stretched horizontally to fill the width of
the screen but not stretched vertically.
(for 1080i, 1080p, and 720p program sources)
The edges of the picture may be hidden.
Picture Size
TheaterWide 1
(for 4:3 format programs)
The center of the picture remains close to its original
proportions, but the left and right edges are stretched
horizontally to fill the screen.
TheaterWide 2
(for letter box programs)
A B C D E F G - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The picture’s top and bottom edges may be hidden*.
TheaterWide 3
(for letter box programs with subtitles)
A B C D E F G - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
A B C D E F G - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The picture’s top and bottom edges are hidden*.
Normal
(for SVGA, XGA, WXGA, and SXGA sources)
This size is a non-stretched display. Some input signal
formats will display with sidebars and/or bars at the top
and bottom.
Dot by Dot
(for SVGA, XGA, WXGA, and SXGA sources)
“Dot by Dot” is a non-scaling display. Depending on
the input signal format, the picture is displayed with
sidebars and/or bars at the top and bottom. (Example:
SVGA input source)
*
To view the hidden areas (such as subtitles or
captions), see “Scrolling the picture”.