ONKYO dv-cp802 Manuale Istruttivo

Pagina di 64
 
9
 
Introduction—
 
Continued
 
Handling Discs
 
• Never touch the 
underside of a 
disc. Always hold 
discs by the edge, 
as shown.
• Never attach adhesive tape or 
sticky labels to discs.
 
Cleaning Discs
 
• For best results, keep your discs clean. Fingerprints 
and dust can affect the sound or picture quality and 
should be removed as follows. Using a clean soft 
cloth, wipe from the center outwards, as shown. Never 
wipe in a circular direction.
• To remove stubborn dust or dirt, wipe the disc with a 
damp soft cloth, and then dry it with a dry cloth.
• Never use solvent-based cleaning fluids, such as thin-
ner or benzine, commercially available cleaners, or 
antistatic sprays intended for vinyl records, because 
they may damage the disc.
 
Storing Discs
 
• Don’t store discs in places subject to direct sunlight, or 
near heat sources.
• Don’t store discs in places subject to moisture or dust, 
such as in a bathroom or near a humidifier.
• Always store discs in their cases and vertically. Stack-
ing, or putting objects on unprotected discs may cause 
warping, scratches, or other damage.
 
Copyright
 
It is forbidden by law to copy, broadcast, show, broadcast 
on cable, play in public, or rent copyrighted material 
without permission.
DVD-Video discs are copy-protected, and any record-
ings made from these discs will be distorted.
This product incorporates copyright protection technol-
ogy that is protected by U.S. patents and other intellec-
tual property rights. Use of this copyright protection 
technology must be authorized by Macrovision, and is 
intended for home and other limited viewing uses only 
unless otherwise authorized by Macrovision. Reverse 
engineering or disassembly is prohibited.
 
 
CD-R (compact disc recordable): 
 
A type of CD 
that can be recorded only once. Can be used for VCD, 
CD, MP3, or JPEG.
 
 
CD-RW (compact disc rewritable): 
 
A type of 
CD that can be recorded over and over again. Can be 
used for VCD, CD, MP3, or JPEG.
 
 
Chapter: 
 
Titles on DVD-Video discs can be subdi-
vided into chapters.
 
 
Component video: 
 
A video connection format that 
separates the luminance (Y) and color difference signals 
(P
 
R
 
, P
 
B
 
), providing better picture quality than S-Video.
 
 
Composite video: 
 
A video connection format that 
combines the luminance and color signals together.
 
 
Direct Digital Path: 
 
Unique Onkyo technology 
that uses dedicated shielded cables to connect the digital 
audio outputs, protecting the digital output signals 
against the possibility of noise and interference.
 
 
Dolby Digital: 
 
Once known as 
 
AC-3,
 
 this is the 
 
des-
ignated surround sound format for DVD-Video, HDTV, 
and select digital broadcasts (cable, satellite, over-the-
air). A Dolby Digital bitstream may contain mono, ste-
reo, Dolby Surround, or 5.1-channel audio information.
 
 
Dolby Pro Logic: 
 
The decoders used in home the-
ater equipment to decode Dolby Surround material. 
 
See
 
 
Dolby Surround.
 
 
Dolby Surround: 
 
The original Dolby surround-
sound format uses matrix encoding to deliver four chan-
nels (left, right, center, and surround) over two audio 
channels. Can be used with VHS video, analog TV, and 
other analog stereo systems. The movie theater version is 
known as 
 
Dolby Stereo
 
.
 
 
Downmixing: 
 
The process of mixing multiple 
audio channels into fewer channels. For example, a 5.1-
channel surround mix can be downmixed into two chan-
nels for reproduction on stereo systems.
 
 
Downsampling: 
 
The process of reducing the sam-
pling rate of digital audio.
 
 
DTS (Digital Theater Systems): 
 
Like Dolby 
Digital, the DTS surround-sound format offers up to 5.1-
channels 
 
of information, 
 
but uses less compression for a 
more faithful sound.
 
 
DVD-Audio: 
 
The DVD format for storing up to six 
(5.1) channels of 24-bit/96 kHz digital audio or two 
channels of 24-bit/192 kHz digital audio.
 
 
DVD-R (DVD recordable): 
 
A type of DVD disc 
that can be recorded only once. Can be used for 
DVD-Video or DVD-Audio.
Underside
 
Terminology