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OPERATION
3-32
Roadie 25K User's Manual
Table 3.3. Regions and Video Standards: Summary
Standard
Where Used
NTSC
N. America and Japan
NTSC 4.43
A tape-only standard for partially-translated hybrid signals
PAL
Most of Europe, China, Australia, some of S. America, some of Africa
PAL-M
Brazil
PAL-NC
Argentina, Chile, other Latin American countries
PAL 60
SECAM
France, Eastern Europe, most of Africa
NOTE: Generally, use "Auto" for all instances EXCEPT: 1) a poor quality input
signal or 2) a black-and-white video signal. In order to detect and display such
signals, select the relevant standard from the list.
INPUT VIDEO BLACK —
compensates for incoming elevated black
levels present in certain video signals, and
ensures that blacks in the display are
neither crushed (i.e., where dark grays appear black) nor excessively elevated (i.e.,
where blacks appear dark gray). By default, the projector automatically determines the
best setting according to the type of incoming video signal:
– Used for DVD output with "enhanced black", SECAM, most
0 IRE
PAL standards, and Japanese NTSC.
– Used for most NTSC video signals.
7.5 IRE
For some types of video, you can override the setting. The control is disabled for other
types of video (and all graphics sources). Generally, if black appears crushed when
brightness = 50, choose "0 IRE". If black appears excessively elevated, use "7.5 IRE".
This slidebar adjusts the color saturation level, i.e. the amount of color in a
COLOR —
video image. Lower settings produce less saturated colors — for example a setting of
"0" produces a black and white image. If the color level is too high, colors will be
overpowering and unrealistic.
This slidebar adjusts the red/green color hue for true color reproduction of
TINT —
video and HDTV signals connected to Input 3 or 4. For best results, adjust tint while
displaying an external test pattern—otherwise, it is recommended that tint remain at
its default setting.
DECODER LUMA DELAY –
signal, delaying the luma signal (intensity) in relation to the chroma (color). In the
image, increasing the luma delay will move luma (seen as a shadow where colors
overlap) to the right slightly, with colors remaining in place. Decreasing this delay
will move the shadow slightly to the left. If necessary for your current source, adjust
so that no shadows occur with adjacent colors.
Input Levels
— SUBMENU
NOTES: 1) Because the projector automatically optimizes input levels for all but the
most unusual of sources, it is recommended that only experienced users use the Input
Levels submenu. 2) Before beginning, check that overall contrast and brightness
settings are near 50 and that color temperature is properly set up on an internal
grayscale test pattern. 3) There must be at least 6-12 consecutive white pixels present
in the image for proper "Auto Input Level" function. Leave this control off after use.
(SUBJECT-TO-CHANGE
)
This control
This control affects any incoming composite or S-video

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