66
EN
Note
• An individual picture on TV screen is called as Frame,
which consists of two separate images called as Field.
Some pictures may be blurred at the “Auto” setting in still
mode due to their data characteristics.
Note
• With discs recorded using the PAL system, a PAL signal
is output for viewing on a PAL system TV.
• Discs recorded with the PAL system cannot be viewed
on an NTSC system TV.
• With discs recorded using the NTSC system, an NTSC
signal is output for viewing on an NTSC or Multi system
TV.
• With discs recorded using the NTSC system, select PAL
to view on a PAL system TV.
Setup
A
General Setting
A
Display
Set the OSD language.
Set the screen saver time delay.
Set the front panel display brightness.
Note
• The display will not light up when the unit is in standby
mode.
This is a Power Saving mode (ECO) for standby.
G
Still Mode (Default: Auto) (DVD only)
Auto
: Automatically select the best resolution setting
(“Frame” or “Field”) based on the data
characteristics of the pictures.
Field
: Select “Field” when the pictures are still
unstable even if “Auto” is selected. “Field”
stabilises the pictures, although the picture
quality may become coarse due to the limited
amount of data.
Frame
: Select “Frame” to display relatively motionless
pictures in higher resolution. “Frame” improves
the picture quality, although it may unstabilise
the pictures due to simultaneous output of two
Field data.
H
TV System (Default: PAL) (DVD only)
PAL
: Outputs a modified PAL signal for viewing discs
recorded with the NTSC system on a PAL system
TV.
Auto
: Changes the video system (PAL / NTSC)
automatically according to the format of the
inserted disc.
Still Mode
Auto
Field
Frame
TV System
PAL
Auto
Display
A
OSD Language (Default: Français)
B
Screen Saver (Default: 10 minutes)
C
FL Dimmer (Default: Bright)
A
B
C
OSD Language
Screen Saver
FL Dimmer
Langue Aff.
é
cran
Français
English
Español
Deutsch
Italiano
Screen Saver
OFF
1 minute
5 minutes
10 minutes
15 minutes
FL Dimmer
Bright
Dark
E9TK5FD_EN.book Page 66 Wednesday, January 13, 2010 10:33 AM