Nissan 370Z (2018 year). Manual — part 13
Outside air is drawn into the passen-
ger compartment to improve the
defogging performance.
Manual operation
Fan speed control:
Turn the “
” fan speed control dial to
manually control the fan speed.
Push the “AUTO” button to return to
automatic control of the fan speed.
Temperature control:
Turn the temperature control dial to set
the desired temperature.
. The temperature can be set within the
following range.
— For U.S.: 60 to 90°F (16 to 32°C)
— For Canada: 64 to 90°F (18 to 32°C)
Air intake control:
. Push the “
” air intake control
button to recirculate interior air inside
the vehicle. The indicator light “
”
will come on.
The air recirculation mode cannot be
activated when the air conditioner is
in the front defrosting mode “
”.
. Push the “
” air intake control
button to switch to the outside air
intake mode. The indicator light “
”
will turn off.
. To switch to the automatic control
mode, push the “
” air intake control
button for approximately 2 seconds.
The indicator light will flash, and then
the air intake will be controlled auto-
matically.
Air flow control:
Pushing the “MODE” manual air flow
control button selects the air outlet to:
:
Air flows from center and side venti-
lators.
:
Air flows from center and side venti-
lators and foot outlets.
:
Air flows mainly from foot outlets.
:
Air flows from defroster and foot
outlets.
To turn the system off
Push the “OFF” button.
SAA2324
SAA2315
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Center display, heater, air conditioner, audio, phone and voice recognition systems
OPERATING TIPS
When the engine coolant temperature
and outside air temperature are low, the
air flow from the foot outlets may not
operate. This is not a malfunction. After
the coolant temperature warms up, air
will flow normally from the foot outlets.
The sensors
and
on the instrument
panel helps maintain a constant tem-
perature. Do not put anything on or
around this sensor.
IN-CABIN MICROFILTER
The air conditioning system is equipped
with an in-cabin microfilter which collects
dirt, pollen, dust, etc. To make sure the air
conditioner heats, defogs, and ventilates
efficiently, replace the filter in accordance
with the specified maintenance intervals
listed in the “9. Maintenance and sche-
dules” section. It is recommended to see a
NISSAN dealer to replace the filter.
The filter should be replaced if air flow
is extremely decreased or when win-
dows fog up easily when operating
heater or air conditioning system.
SERVICING AIR CONDITIONER
The air conditioning system in your
NISSAN is charged with a refrigerant
designed with the environment in mind.
This refrigerant will not harm the
earth’s ozone layer. However, special
charging equipment and lubricant are
required when servicing your NISSAN air
conditioner. Using improper refrigerants
or lubricants will cause severe damage to
your air conditioning system. (See “Capa-
cities and recommended fluids/lubri-
cants” (P.10-2) for air conditioning
system refrigerant and lubricant recom-
mendations.)
Your NISSAN dealer will be able to service
your environmentally friendly air condi-
tioning system.
WARNING
The system contains refrigerant un-
der high pressure. To avoid personal
injury, any air conditioner service
should be done only by an experi-
enced technician with the proper
equipment.
AUDIO OPERATION PRECAUTIONS
Radio
Push the ignition switch to the ACC or ON
position and push the radio band select
button to turn on the radio. If you listen to
the radio with the engine not running, the
ignition switch should be pushed to the
ACC position.
Radio reception is affected by station
signal strength, distance from radio
transmitter, buildings, bridges, mountains
and other external influences. Intermit-
tent changes in reception quality nor-
mally are caused by these external
influences.
Using a cellular phone in or near the
vehicle may influence radio reception
quality.
Radio reception:
Your NISSAN radio system is equipped
with state-of-the-art electronic circuits to
enhance radio reception. These circuits
are designed to extend reception range,
and to enhance the quality of that recep-
tion.
However there are some general charac-
teristics of both FM and AM radio signals
that can affect radio reception quality in a
moving vehicle, even when the finest
equipment is used. These characteristics
AUDIO SYSTEM
are completely normal in a given recep-
tion area, and do not indicate any mal-
function in your NISSAN radio system.
Reception conditions will constantly
change because of vehicle movement.
Buildings, terrain, signal distance and
interference from other vehicles can work
against ideal reception. Described below
are some of the factors that can affect
your radio reception.
Some cellular phones or other devices
may cause interference or a buzzing
noise to come from the audio system
speakers. Storing the device in a different
location may reduce or eliminate the
noise.
SAA0306
FM radio reception:
Range: FM range is normally limited to 25
to 30 miles (40 to 48 km), with monaural
(single channel) FM having slightly more
range than stereo FM. External influences
may sometimes interfere with FM station
reception even if the FM station is within
25 miles (40 km). The strength of the FM
signal is directly related to the distance
between the transmitter and receiver. FM
signals follow a line-of-sight path, exhibit-
ing many of the same characteristics as
light. For example they will reflect off
objects.
Fade and drift: As your vehicle moves
away from a station transmitter, the
signals will tend to fade and/or drift.
Static and flutter: During signal interfer-
ence from buildings, large hills or due to
antenna position, usually in conjunction
with increased distance from the station
transmitter, static or flutter can be heard.
This can be reduced by lowering the
treble setting to reduce the treble re-
sponse.
Multipath reception: Because of the re-
flective characteristics of FM signals, di-
rect and reflected signals reach the
receiver at the same time. The signals
may cancel each other, resulting in mo-
mentary flutter or loss of sound.
AM radio reception:
AM signals, because of their low fre-
quency, can bend around objects and
skip along the ground. In addition, the
signals can be bounced off the iono-
sphere and bent back to earth. Because
of these characteristics. AM signals are
also subject to interference as they travel
from transmitter to receiver.
Fading: Occurs while the vehicle is pas-
sing through freeway underpasses or in
areas with many tall buildings. It can also
occur for several seconds during iono-
spheric turbulence even in areas where
no obstacles exist.
Static: Caused by thunderstorms, electri-
Center display, heater, air conditioner, audio, phone and voice recognition systems
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cal power lines, electric signs and even
traffic lights.
Satellite radio reception (if so
equipped):
When the satellite radio is used for the
first time or the battery has been re-
placed, the satellite radio may not work
properly. This is not a malfunction. Wait
more than 10 minutes with the satellite
radio ON and the vehicle outside of any
metal or large building for the satellite
radio to receive all of the necessary data.
The satellite radio mode requires an
active SiriusXM Satellite Radio subscrip-
tion. The satellite radio is not available in
Alaska, Hawaii and Guam.
The satellite radio performance may be
affected if cargo carried on the roof
blocks the satellite radio signal.
If possible, do not put cargo near the
satellite antenna.
A build up of ice on the satellite radio
antenna can affect satellite radio perfor-
mance. Remove the ice to restore satellite
radio reception.
SAA0480
Compact Disc (CD) player
. Do not force a compact disc into the
CD insert slot. This could damage the
CD and/or CD changer/player.
. Trying to load a CD with the CD door
closed could damage the CD and/or
CD changer.
. During cold weather or rainy days, the
player may malfunction due to the
humidity. If this occurs, remove the CD
and dehumidify or ventilate the player
completely.
. The player may skip while driving on
rough roads.
. The CD player sometimes cannot
function when the passenger com-
partment temperature is extremely
high. Decrease the temperature be-
fore use.
. Only use high quality 4.7 in (12 cm)
round discs that have the “COMPACT
disc DIGITAL AUDIO” logo on the disc
or packaging.
. Do not expose the CD to direct sun-
light.
. CDs that are of poor quality, dirty,
scratched, covered with fingerprints,
or that have pin holes may not work
properly.
. The following CDs may not work
properly:
— Copy control compact discs (CCCD)
— Recordable compact discs (CD-R)
— Rewritable compact discs (CD-RW)
. Do not use the following CDs as they
may cause the CD player to malfunc-
tion.
— 3.1 in (8 cm) discs
— CDs that are not round
— CDs with a paper label
— CDs that are warped, scratched, or
have abnormal edges
. This audio system can only play pre-
recorded CDs. It has no capabilities to
record or burn CDs.
. If the CD cannot be played, one of the
following messages will be displayed.
CHECK DISC:
— Confirm that the CD is inserted
correctly (the label side is facing
up, etc.).
— Confirm that the CD is not bent or
warped and it is free of scratches.
PUSH EJECT:
This is an error due to the tempera-
ture inside the player is too high.
Remove the CD by pushing the EJECT
button, and after a short time reinsert
the CD. The CD can be played when
the temperature of the player returns
to normal.
UNPLAYABLE:
The file is unplayable in this audio
system (only MP3 or WMA CD).
LHA0484
DVD (Digital Versatile Disc) player
(models with navigation system)
. Do not force a compact disc into the
CD/DVD insert slot. This could damage
the CD/DVD player.
. During cold weather or rainy days, the
player may malfunction due to hu-
midity. If this occurs, remove the CD/
DVD and dehumidify or ventilate the
player completely.
. The player may skip while driving on
rough roads.
. The CD/DVD player sometimes cannot
function when the passenger com-
partment temperature is extremely
high. Decrease the temperature be-
fore use.
. Only use high quality 4.7 in (12 cm)
round discs that have the “COMPACT
disc DIGITAL AUDIO” or “DVD Video”
logo on the disc or packaging.
. Do not expose the CD/DVD to direct
sunlight.
. CD/DVDs that are of poor quality,
dirty, scratched, covered with finger-
prints, or that have pinholes may not
work properly.
. The following CD/DVDs are not guar-
anteed to play:
— Copy control compact discs (CCCD)
— Recordable compact discs (CD-R)
— Rewritable compact discs (CD-RW)
— Recordable DVDs (DVD±R, DVD±R
DL)
— Rewritable DVDs (DVD±RW, DVD±RW
DL)
. Do not use the following CD/DVDs as
they may cause the CD/DVD player to
malfunction.
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— 3.1 in (8 cm) discs
— CD/DVDs that are not round
— CD/DVDs with a paper label
— C D / D V D s t h a t a r e w a r p e d ,
scratched or have abnormal edges
— This audio system can only play
prerecorded CD/DVDs. It has no
capabilities to record or burn CD/
DVDs.
. If the CD/DVD cannot be played, one
of the following messages will be
displayed.
Disc Read Error:
— Confirm that the CD/DVD is in-
serted correctly (the label side is
facing up, etc.).
— Confirm that the CD/DVD is not
bent or warped and it is free of
scratches.
Please Eject Disc:
— This may be an error due to the
temperature inside the player being
too high. Remove the CD/DVD by
pushing the EJECT button, and
after a short time reinsert the CD/
DVD. The CD/DVD can be played
when the temperature of the player
returns to normal. If the error
persists, consult your local dealer.
Unplayable File:
— The file may be copy protected.
— The file is not MP3, WMA, AAC, M4A
or DivX® type.
Region Invalid:
— The DVD is not for region 1 or all
regions. Use DVDs with a region
code “1”, “ALL” or “1 included” for
your DVD entertainment system.
(The region code
is displayed as
a small symbol printed on the top
of the DVD .) This vehicle-installed
DVD player cannot play DVDs with a
region code other than “1” or “ALL”.
Copyright and trademark:
. The technology protected by the U.S.
patent and other intellectual property
rights owned by Macrovision Corpora-
tion and other right holders is
adopted for this system.
. This copyright protected technology
cannot be used without a permit from
Macrovision Corporation. It is limited
to be personal use, etc., as long as the
permit from Macrovision Corporation
is not issued.
. Modifying or disassembling is prohib-
ited.
. Dolby digital is manufactured under
license from Dolby Laboratories, Inc.
. Dolby and the double D mark “
” are
trademarks of Dolby Laboratories, Inc.
. DTS and DTS 2.0 “
” are registered
trademarks of DTS, Inc.
Parental level (parental control):
DVDs with the parental control setting
can be played with this system. Please
use your own judgement to set the
parental control with the system.
Disc selection:
The following disc formats can be played
with the DVD drive.
. DVD-VIDEO
. VIDEO-CD
. CD-DA (Conventional Compact Disc)
. DTS-CD
USB (Universal Serial Bus) connec-
tion port
WARNING
Do not connect, disconnect or oper-
ate the USB device while driving.
Doing so can be a distraction. If
distracted you could lose control of
your vehicle and cause an accident
or serious injury.
CAUTION
. Do not force the USB device into
the USB connection port. Insert-
ing the USB device tilted or up-
side-down into the port may da-
mage the port. Make sure that
the USB device is connected cor-
rectly into the USB connection
port.
. Do not grab the USB connection
port cover (if so equipped) when
pulling the USB device out of the
port. This could damage the port
and the cover.
. Do not leave the USB cable in a
place where it can be pulled
unintentionally. Pulling the cable
may damage the port.
The vehicle is not equipped with a USB
device. USB devices should be purchased
separately as necessary.
This system cannot be used to format
USB devices. To format a USB device, use
a personal computer.
In some states/area, the USB device for
the front seats plays only sound without
images for regulatory reasons, even when
the vehicle is parked.
This system supports various USB mem-
ory devices, USB hard drives and iPod®
players. Some USB devices may not be
supported by this system.
. Partitioned USB devices may not be
played correctly.
. Some characters used in other lan-
guages (Chinese, Japanese, etc.) may
not appear properly in the display.
Using English language characters
with a USB device is recommended.
General notes for USB use:
Refer to your device manufacturer’s own-
er information regarding the proper use
and care of the device.
Notes for iPod® use:
“Made for iPod®”, “Made for iPhone®”, and
“Made for iPad®” mean that an electronic
accessory has been designed to connect
specifically to iPod®, iPhone®, or iPad®,
respectively, and has been certified by the
developer to meet Apple performance
standards.
Apple is not responsible for the operation
of this device or its compliance with
safety and regulatory standards.
Please note that the use of this accessory
with iPod®, iPhone®, or iPad® may affect
wireless performance.
iPad®, iPhone®, iPod®, iPod classic®, iPod
nano®, iPod shuffle®, and iPod touch® are
trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the
U.S. and other countries. Lightning is a
trademark of Apple Inc.
. Improperly plugging in the iPod® may
cause a checkmark to be displayed on
and off (flickering). Always make sure
that the iPod® is connected properly.
. An iPod nano® (1st Generation) may
remain in fast forward or rewind mode
if it is connected during a seek opera-
tion. In this case, please manually
reset the iPod®.
. An iPod nano® (2nd Generation) will
continue to fast-forward or rewind if it
is disconnected during a seek opera-
tion.
. An incorrect song title may appear
when the Play Mode is changed while
using an iPod nano® (2nd Generation)
. Audiobooks may not play in the same
order as they appear on an iPod®.
. Large video files cause slow responses
in an iPod®. The vehicle center display
may momentarily black out, but will
soon recover.
. If an iPod® automatically selects large
video files while in the shuffle mode,
the vehicle center display may mo-
mentarily black out, but will soon
recover.
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Compressed Audio Files (MP3/
WMA/AAC) (if so equipped)
Explanation of terms:
. MP3 — MP3 is short for Moving Pic-
tures Experts Group Audio Layer 3.
MP3 is the most well known com-
pressed digital audio file format. This
format allows for near “CD quality”
sound, but at a fraction of the size of
normal audio files. MP3 conversion of
an audio track can reduce the file size
by approximately a 10:1 ratio (Sam-
pling: 44.1 kHz, Bit rate: 128 kbps) with
virtually no perceptible loss in quality.
The compression reduces certain
parts of sound that seem inaudible
to most people.
. WMA — Windows Media Audio (WMA) is
a compressed audio format created
by Microsoft as an alternative to MP3.
The WMA codec offers greater file
compression than the MP3 codec,
enabling storage of more digital audio
tracks in the same amount of space
when compared to MP3s at the same
level of quality.
This product is protected by certain
intellectual property rights of Micro-
soft Corporation and third parties. Use
or distribution of such technology
outside of this product is prohibited
without a license from Microsoft or an
authorized Microsoft subsidiary and
third parties.
. AAC/M4A — Advanced Audio Coding
(AAC) is a lossy audio compression
format. Audio files that have been
encoded with AAC are generally smal-
ler in size and deliver a higher quality
of sound than MP3.
. Bit rate — Bit rate denotes the number
of bits per second used by a digital
music file. The size and quality of a
compressed digital audio file is deter-
mined by the bit rate used when
encoding the file.
. Sampling frequency — Sampling fre-
quency is the rate at which the
samples of a signal are converted
from analog to digital (A/D conver-
sion) per second.
. Multisession — Multisession is one of
the methods for writing data to med-
ia. Writing data once to the media is
called a single session, and writing
more than once is called a multises-
sion.
. ID3/WMA Tag — The ID3/WMA tag is
the part of the encoded MP3 or WMA
file that contains information about
the digital music file such as song title,
artist, album title, encoding bit rate,
track time duration, etc. ID3 tag in-
formation is displayed on the Album/
Artist/Track title line on the display.
* Windows® and Windows Media® are
registered trademarks or trademarks of
Microsoft Corporation in the United
States of America and/or other countries.
SAA2494
Playback order:
. The folder names of folders not con-
taining compressed audio files are not
shown in the display.
. If there is a file in the top level of a
disc/USB, “Root Folder” is displayed.
. The playback order is the order in
which the files were written by the
writing software, so the files might not
play in the desired order.
. Music playback order of compressed
audio files is as illustrated.
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Specification chart:
Supported media
CD, CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-ROM*5, DVD±R*5, DVD±RW*5, DVD±R DL*5, USB2.0
Supported file
systems
Models with navigation sys-
tem
CD, CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-ROM, DVD±R, DVD±RW, DVD±R DL: ISO9660 LEVEL1, ISO9660 LEVEL2, Romeo,
Joliet
* ISO9660 Level 3 (packet writing) is not supported.
* Files saved using the Live File System component (on a Windows Vista-based computer) are not
supported.
UDF Bridge (UDF1.02+ISO9660), UDF1.5, UDF2.0
* VDF1.5/VDF2.0 (packet writing) is not supported.
Models without navigation
system
CD, CD-R, CD-RW: ISO9660 LEVEL1, ISO9660 LEVEL2, Romeo, Joliet
* ISO9660 Level 3 (packet writing) is not supported.
* Files saved using the Live File System component (on a Windows Vista-based computer) are not
supported.
USB memory: FAT16, FAT32
Supported
versions*1
MP3
Version
Models with navigation system:
MPEG1 Audio Layer 3
Models without navigation system:
MPEG1, MPEG2, MPEG2.5
Sampling fre-
quency
8 kHz - 48 kHz
Bit rate
8 kbps - 320 kbps, VBR*4
WMA*2
Version
Models with navigation system:
WMA7, WMA8, WMA9
Models without navigation system:
WMA7, WMA8, WMA9 except WMA9 Pro, WMA9 Lossless, WMA9 Voice
Sampling fre-
quency
32 kHz - 48 kHz
Bit rate
32 kbps - 192 kbps, VBR (Ver.9)*4
AAC*5
Version
MPEG-AAC
Sampling fre-
quency
8 kHz - 96 kHz
Bit rate
16 kbps - 320 kbps, VBR*4
Tag information (Song title and Artist name)
ID3 tag VER1.0, VER1.1, VER2.2, VER2.3, VER2.4 (MP3 only)
WMA tag (WMA only)
Folder levels
With navigation system:
Folder levels: 8, Folders: 512 (including root folder), Files: 5000
Without navigation system:
Folder levels: 8, Folders: 255 (including root folder), files: 512
Displayable character codes*3
01: ASCII, 02: ISO-8859-1, 03: UNICODE (UTF-16 BOM Big Endian), 04: UNICODE (UTF-16 Non-BOM Big
Endian), 05: UNICODE (UTF-8), 06: UNICODE (Non-UTF-16 BOM Little Endian), 07: SHIFT-JIS
*1
Files created with a combination of 48 kHz sampling frequency and 64 kbps bit rate cannot be played.
*2
Protected WMA files (DRM) cannot be played.
*3
Available codes depend on what kind of media, versions and information are going to be displayed.
*4
When VBR files are played, the playback time may not be displayed correctly.
*5
Models with navigation system
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Center display, heater, air conditioner, audio, phone and voice recognition systems
Troubleshooting guide:
Symptom
Cause and Countermeasure
Cannot play
Check if the disc or USB device was inserted correctly.
Check if the disc is scratched or dirty.
Check if there is condensation inside the player, and if there is, wait until the condensation is gone (about 1 hour)
before using the player.
If there is a temperature increase error, the player will play correctly after it returns to the normal temperature.
If there is a mixture of music CD files (CD-DA data) and compressed audio files on a CD, only the music CD files (CD-
DA data) will be played.
Files with extensions other than “.MP3 (.mp3)”, “.WMA (.wma)”, “.AAC (.aac)”, “.M4A (.m4a)”, or “.AA3 (.aa3)” cannot be
played. In addition, the character codes and number of characters for folder names and file names should be in
compliance with the specifications.
Check if the disc or the file is generated in an irregular format. This may occur depending on the variation or the
setting of compressed audio writing applications or other text editing applications.
Check if the finalization process, such as session close and disc close, is done for the disc.
Check if the disc or USB device is protected by copyright.
Poor sound quality
Check if the disc is scratched or dirty.
It takes a relatively long time
before the music starts playing.
If there are many folder or file levels on the disc or USB device, some time may be required before the music starts
playing.
Music cuts off or skips
The writing software and hardware combination might not match, or the writing speed, writing depth, writing
width, etc., might not match the specifications. Try using the slowest writing speed.
Skipping with high bit rate files Skipping may occur with large quantities of data, such as for high bit rate data.
Move immediately to the next
song when playing.
If an unsupported compressed audio file has been given a supported extension like .MP3, or when play is prohibited
by copyright protection, the player will skip to the next song.
The songs do not play back in
the desired order.
The playback order is the order in which the files were written by the writing software, so the files might not play in
the desired order.
Random/Shuffle may be active on the audio system or on a USB device.
Compressed Video Files (models
with navigation system)
Explanation of terms:
. DivX® - DivX® refers to the DivX® codec
owned by DivX, Inc. used for a lossy
compression of video based on MPEG-
4.
. AVI - AVI stands for Audio Video
Interleave. It is a standard file format
originated by Microsoft Corporation. A
“.divx” encoded file can be saved into
the “.avi” file format for playback on
this system if it meets the require-
ments stated in the table in this
section. However, not all the “.avi” files
are playable on this system since
different encodings can be used than
the DivX® codec.
. ASF - ASF stands for Advanced Sys-
tems Format. It is a file format owned
by Microsoft Corporation. Note: Only “.
asf” files that meet the requirements
stated in the table in this section can
be played.
. Bit rate — Bit rate denotes the number
of bits per second used by a digital
video file. The size and quality of a
compressed digital audio file is deter-
mined by the bit rate used when
encoding the file.
Requirement for Supporting Video Playback:
Media
CD, CD-R, CD-RW, DVD, DVD±R, DVD±RW, DVD±RW DL, USB 2.0 Memory
File Systems
CD,
CD-R,
CD-RW,
DVD,
DVD±R,
DVD±RW,
DVD±RW DL
ISO9660 LEVEL1, ISO9660 LEVEL2, Romeo, Joliet, UDF Bridge
(UDF1.02+ISO9660), UDF1.5, UDF2.0
- ISO9660 Level 3 (packet writing) is not supported.
- Files saved using the Live File System component (on a
Windows Vista-based computer) are not supported.
- VDF1.5/VDF2.0 (packet writing) is not supported.
USB Memory
FAT16, FAT32
File Types
.divx, .avi
Video Codecs
DivX3, DivX4, DivX5, DivX6
Audio Codecs
MP3, MPEG2.5 Audio Layer3, Dolby
Digital, LPCM
.asf
Video Codec
ISO-MPEG4
Audio Codec
G.726
Bit Rates
.divx, .avi
Maximum Average
4Mbps
Maximum Peak
8Mbps
Resolution
.divx, .avi
Minimum
32 × 32
Maximum
720 × 480
.asf
Minimum
32 × 32
Maximum
720 × 576
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Bluetooth® Audio player (models
with navigation system)
Bluetooth® is a trademark
owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc.
and licensed to Clarion Co.,
Ltd.
. Some Bluetooth® audio devices may
not be recognized by the in-vehicle
audio system.
. It is necessary to set up the wireless
connection between a compatible
Bluetooth® audio device and the in-
vehicle Bluetooth® module before
using the Bluetooth® audio player.
. Operating procedure of the Blue-
tooth® audio player will vary depend-
ing on the device. Make sure it is
understood how to operate an audio
device before using it with this system.
. The Bluetooth® audio player may be
stopped under the following condi-
tions:
— Receiving a hands-free call.
— Checking the connection to the
hands-free phone.
. Do not place a Bluetooth® audio
device in an area surrounded by metal
or far away from the in-vehicle Blue-
tooth® module to prevent tone quality
degradation and wireless connection
disruption.
. While an audio device is connected
through a Bluetooth® wireless con-
nection, the battery power of the
device may discharge quicker than
usual.
. This system supports the Bluetooth®
Audio Distribution Profile (A2DP,
AVRCP).
. Wireless LAN (Wi-Fi) and the Blue-
tooth® functions share the same fre-
quency band (2.4 GHz). Using the
Bluetooth® and the wireless LAN func-
tions at the same time may slow down
or disconnect the communication and
cause undesired noise. It is recom-
mended that you turn off the wireless
LAN (Wi-Fi) when using the Bluetooth®
functions.
JVH0923X
1.
CD eject button
2.
FM·AM button
3.
RPT (repeat) button
4.
RDM (random play) button
5.
Radio memory buttons
6.
A-Z button
7.
USB button
8.
SCAN button
9.
CD button
10.
Power button/VOL (volume) control knob
11.
Rewind button
12.
Fast Forward button
13.
DISP (display) button
14.
SETUP button
15.
Back button
16.
TUNE/MENU knob/ENTER button
17.
AUX button
FM-AM RADIO WITH COMPACT DISC
(CD) PLAYER
Audio main operation
The audio system operates when the
ignition switch is in the “ACC” or “ON”
position.
POWER ON/OFF:
To turn on the audio system, push the
Power button.
. The system will turn on in the mode
which was used immediately before
the system was turned off.
. If there is no CD loaded, the radio will
be turned on.
To turn off the audio system, push the
Power button.
Volume control:
To control the volume, turn the VOL
control knob.
Turn the VOL control knob clockwise to
make the sound louder.
Turn the VOL control knob counterclock-
wise to make the sound quieter.
Center display, heater, air conditioner, audio, phone and voice recognition systems
4-43
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Center display, heater, air conditioner, audio, phone and voice recognition systems
SETUP button:
To configure Audio, Clock, Language or
Scroll direction settings, perform the
following procedure:
1. Push the SETUP button.
2. Push the ENTER button.
3. Turn the TUNE/MENU knob clockwise
or counterclockwise, the display will
appear in the following order:
Audio Clock Language Scroll
Direction
After the desired levels have been set,
push either the back button repeatedly,
the SETUP button, or wait for 8 seconds
without pushing any buttons to exit the
menu screen.
Audio adjustments:
Push the SETUP button to enter the setup
menu screen then select Audio by using
TUNE/MENU knob.
Each time the ENTER button is pushed,
the mode will change as follows:
Bass
? Treble ? Fade ? Balance ? AUX
VOL
? SPD VOL ? Audio (setup menu
screen)
Turn the TUNE/MENU knob clockwise or
counterclockwise to adjust the following
items and push the ENTER button to
confirm.
Bass control:
Use this control to enhance or attenuate
bass response sound.
Treble control:
Use this control to enhance or attenuate
the treble.
Fade control:
Use this control to adjust the balance of
the volume between the front and rear (if
so equipped) speakers.
Balance control:
Use this control to adjust the balance of
the volume between the left and right
speakers.
AUX VOL (Auxiliary volume) control:
Use this control to adjust the volume
output from the auxiliary source.
SPD VOL (Speed volume) control:
This mode controls the volume output
from the speakers automatically in rela-
tion to vehicle speed.
Adjusting the setting to 0 (zero) turns off
the speed volume feature.
Clock setting:
Push the SETUP button to enter the setup
menu screen then select Clock.
Turn the TUNE/MENU knob, the mode will
change as follows:
Set Time ON/OFF Clock Format
Set time
Set Time:
Select Set Time then adjust the clock as
follows:
1. The hour display will start flashing.
Turn the TUNE/MENU knob to adjust
the hour and push the ENTER button.
2. The minute display will start flashing.
Turn the TUNE/MENU knob to adjust
the minute and push the ENTER
button to finish the clock adjustment.
ON/OFF:
Set the clock display between on or off
when the audio unit is turned off. If set in
the ON position, the clock will be dis-
played when the audio unit is turned off
either by pushing the power button or
when the ignition switch is placed in the
“OFF” position.
Clock Format:
Switch the clock display between 24-hour
mode and 12-hour clock mode.
Language setting:
Push the SETUP button to enter the setup
menu screen then select Language.
Select the appropriate language and
push the ENTER button. Upon completion,
the screen will automatically adapt the
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