Infotainment system 7-21 – CHEVROLET 2011 Malibu User Manual

Page 177

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Chevrolet Malibu Owner Manual - 2011

Infotainment System

7-21

Drivers are encouraged to set up
any auxiliary device while the
vehicle is in P (Park). See
Defensive Driving on page 9‑2 for
more information on driver
distraction.

Using the 3.5 mm (1/8 in)
Auxiliary Input Jack

The radio system may have a
3.5 mm (1/8 in) auxiliary input jack
located on the lower right or left side
of the faceplate. This is not an audio
output; do not plug the headphone
set into the front auxiliary input jack.
An external audio device such as an
iPod

®

, laptop computer, MP3 player,

CD changer, etc. can be connected
to the auxiliary input jack for use as
another audio source.

To use a portable audio player,
connect a 3.5 mm (1/8 in) cable to
the auxiliary input jack. When a
device is connected, press the CD/
AUX button to begin playing audio
from the device over the vehicle
speakers.

O

(Power/Volume): Turn to adjust

the volume. Additional volume
adjustments may have to be made
from the portable device if the
volume is too quiet or not loud.

BAND: Press to listen to the radio
while a portable audio device is
connected to the auxiliary input. The
portable audio device continues
playing until it is stopped or
turned off.

CD/AUX (CD/Auxiliary): Press to
play a CD while a portable audio
device is connected to the auxiliary
input. Press again and the system
begins playing audio from the
connected portable audio player. If a
portable audio player is not
connected, No Aux Input Device
may display.

Using the USB Port

The radio may have a USB port
located on the lower right side of the
faceplate. Radios that have a USB
port can play .mp3 and .wma files

that are stored on a USB storage
device as well as tracks that are
stored on an iPod

®

.

USB Supported File and Folder
Structure

The radio supports:

.

Up to 700 folders.

.

Up to 8 folders in depth.

.

Up to 65,535 files.

.

Folder and file names up to
64 bytes.

.

Files with an .mp3 or .wma file
extension.

.

AAC files stored on an iPod.

.

FAT16

.

FAT32

Root Directory

The root directory is treated as a
folder. Files are stored in the root
directory when the disc or storage
device does not contain folders.

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