Adjusting audio and video 05 – Pioneer SX-LX03 User Manual

Page 106

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Adjusting audio and video

05

106

En

3

Adjust the picture quality.

When

/ are pressed, the adjustments can

be made watching the picture. The detailed
settings screen reappears when

ENTER is

pressed.

Prog.Motion – Adjust according to the
type of image (movie or still image). This is
effective when outputting video materials
as progressive images.

Pure Cinema – This setting optimizes the
operation of the progressive scanning
circuit for playing film materials. Normally
set it to

Auto1. If the picture seems

unnatural, switch this to

Auto 2, On or Off

(page 106).

YNR – Reduces noise in the luminance (Y)
signal.

CNR – Reduces noise in the chroma (C)
signal.

BNR – Reduces the block noise (block-
shaped distortion generated upon MPEG
compression).

MNR – Reduces the mosquito noise
(distortion along the contours of the
picture generated upon MPEG
compression).

Detail – Emphasizes the picture’s
contours.

White Level – Adjusts the level of the
white portions.

Black Level – Adjusts the level of the black
portions.

Black Setup – Select the black level as the
setup level. Normally select

0 IRE. If the

black is too dense and all the dark colors
are displayed in a uniform black due to the
combination with the connected monitor,
select

7.5 IRE.

Gamma Correction – Adjusts how the
dark portions of the picture look.

Hue – Adjusts the balance between green
and red.

Chroma Level – Adjusts the density of the
colors.

Note

Prog.Motion and Pure Cinema have the
effect only for pictures recorded in the
interlaced scan format (576i/480i or 1080i
signals).

Prog.Motion is disabled when Pure
Cinema
is set to On.

Black Setup have the effect only for
pictures output from the

VIDEO and S-

VIDEO output terminals, and for NTSC
signals output.

YNR, CNR, BNR and MNR are disabled
when 1080/24p signals are output from the
HDMI OUT terminal.

Closing the Video Adjust screen

Press HOME MENU.

About Pure Cinema

There are two types of video signals:

Video material – Video signals recorded
at 25 or 30 frames/second

Film material – Video signals recorded at
24 frames/second

“Pure Cinema” uses signal processing suited
for “film material” when converting 576i/480i or
1080i interlaced video signals into progressive
video signals, resulting in clear picture
reproduction without losing the quality of the
material.

is displayed on the disc information

screen when playing the “film material”
pictures of DVD-Video discs (page 95).

ENTER

Motion

Still

Prog. Motion

LX03BD_2.book Page 106 Monday, July 28, 2008 4:30 PM

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