Panasonic PT-DZ770E Operating Guide

Page of 124
[SIGNAL LIST] menu
ENGLISH - 77
Settings
Protecting the registered data
1)  Press ▲▼◀▶ to select the signal to 
protect.
2)  Press the <ENTER> button.
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The 
[REGISTERED SIGNAL STATUS] screen 
is displayed.
3)  Press the <ENTER> button.
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The 
[REGISTERED SIGNAL SETUP] screen is 
displayed.
4)  Press ▲▼ to select [LOCK].
5)  Press 
◀▶ to switch [LOCK].
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The setting will change as follows each time 
you press the button.
[OFF]
[ON]
[OFF]
The signal is not protected.
[ON]
The signal is protected.
Note
 
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When [LOCK] is set to [ON], signal delete, image 
adjustment and auto setup are not available. To 
perform these operations, set [LOCK] to [OFF].
 
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A signal can be registered to sub memory even if it 
is protected.
 
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Even a protected signal will be deleted if 
[INITIALIZE] is executed.
Expanding signal lock-in range
1)  Press ▲▼◀▶ to select the signal to 
set.
2)  Press the <ENTER> button.
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The 
[REGISTERED SIGNAL STATUS] screen 
is displayed.
3)  Press the <ENTER> button.
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The 
[REGISTERED SIGNAL SETUP] screen is 
displayed.
4)  Press ▲▼ to select [LOCK-IN RANGE].
5)  Press 
◀▶ to switch [LOCK-IN 
RANGE].
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The setting will change as follows each time 
you press the button.
[NARROW]
[WIDE]
[NARROW] Select in most cases.
[WIDE]
Widens the lock-in range.
Note
 
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Switch the range that determines that a signal to be 
input is the same signal that is already registered.
 
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To prioritize the determination that it is the same 
signal that is already registered, set to the [WIDE] 
setting.
 
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Use in cases such as when the synchronizing 
frequency of a signal to be input has changed 
slightly, or multiple signal lists are registered.
 
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Can only be used when a signal is input from the 
<RGB 1 IN> terminal, <RGB 2 IN> terminal, <DVI-D 
IN> terminal, or <HDMI IN> terminal.
 
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When [WIDE] is set, the image may appear 
distorted because a signal is determined to be the 
same signal even if a synchronizing frequency 
changes slightly.
 
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When a signal to be input corresponds to the 
signal set in [WIDE], a registered signal with a high 
memory number receives priority. Example: A signal 
to be input that corresponds to memory numbers 
A2, A4 and B1 will be determined to be B1.
 
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When a registration signal is deleted, the settings 
are also deleted.
 
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In an environment where multiple types of signals 
are input to the same terminal, signals are 
sometimes not determined correctly when settings 
are set to [WIDE].