Listening To Dab Radio; Selecting A Station; Changing The Information Displayed; Storing And Recalling Presets - PURE DTM-300 Owner's Manual

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Listening to DAB radio

To listen to DAB radio push the DAB/FM button until you see the DAB icon on the left
of the screen.
When you first switch on your DTM-300 it automatically enters DAB mode, autotunes
to find all the DAB stations available in your area and lists them in alphanumeric
order.

Selecting a station

To change stations, press the +/- buttons to scroll through the station list,
then push the SELECT button to tune to the highlighted station.
The currently selected station is shown at the top of the screen.

Changing the information displayed

DTM-300 has seven DAB display modes which change what you see on the
bottom line of the screen while you listen to DAB radio. Push the Display
button to switch between the modes.
Text
Frequency
Broadcast info Data rate at which the station is being transmitted and
Signal quality As a guide, values from 85 to 100 indicate good reception,
Content
Multiplex
Time and Date Time and date broadcast by the multiplex.

Storing and recalling presets

You can store up to 9 of your favourite stations as presets which you can then
access quickly using the numbered buttons on the remote control.
To store a preset - Hold down the numbered button you want to store the
current station under. The preset is stored, overwriting any previous one.
To recall a preset - Press the numbered button for the preset you want to
listen to.

Changing DAB options

To customise the way your DTM-300 works in DAB mode push the Menu
button and select one of the following options:
Station order
Change the order of stations on your station list using this option. The current
order is shown at the top of the screen. Choose from the following:
Scrolling text broadcast by most stations.
DAB channel and frequency of the current station.
stereo or mono indicator. The data rate is set by the stations
to suit the type of material being transmitted. High rates
generally mean higher quality.
70 to 84 average reception and 0 to 69 poor reception.
Description of the content broadcast by the station.
Name of the multiplex the current station belongs to.
Multiplexes are groups of stations broadcast by a single
operator.
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