Playing Music Via Bluetooth; To Play Music; Disconnecting Bluetooth Connection - Audiolab M-ONE User Instructions

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Playing Music via Bluetooth

You can wirelessly connect M-ONE to a music source via Bluetooth wireless technology.
Volume up/down, standby and mute in/out can be controlled from either your Bluetooth
source or from M-ONE. Other functions – play, pause, previous track, next track, fast
forward and reverse are all controlled from your Bluetooth source only.
Playing Music via Bluetooth
You can wirelessly connect M-ONE to a music source via Bluetooth wireless technology.
Volume up/down, standby and mute in/out can be controlled from either your Bluetooth
source or from M-ONE. Other functions – play, pause, previous track, next track, fast
forward and reverse are all controlled from your Bluetooth source only.

To play music

Select M-ONE as a music output device on your Bluetooth source to start playing music.

Disconnecting Bluetooth Connection

To disconnect the Bluetooth music source either
•Move the Bluetooth source beyond the communication area
•Turn off the connected device or turn off its Bluetooth function
Note:
If you have difficulty connecting M-ONE to a Bluetooth device, please try selecting "Forget
this Device" on your source unit and then go through the connection procedure again.
Selecting a Digital Filter
M-ONE has 3 PCM filters and 4 DSD filters available. Press the remote control MENU key to
enter menu mode, press
or
to access the "Digital Filter" or "DSD Bandwidth" menu
page, press
to enter the filter page, press
press
again to confirm the chosen filter. Pressing the SEL knob on the front panel can also
enter the menu mode, rotating this knob turns the menu page to "Digital Filter " or "DSD
Bandwidth", press the SEL knob again to enter this page and then rotate the knob to change
filters, press the SEL knob again to select a filter.
The "Sharp Rolloff" filter typifies industrial standard characteristics (-6dB at 1/2 Fs with
significant time-domain ringing ) and is included here for comparison purposes.
The "Slow Rolloff" filter starts rolling off at a lower frequency than the Sharp Rolloff filter but has
a gentle rate of attenuation and significantly less "time-domain ringing". It is not recommended
to use this in normal operation, unless the digital signal from a source is very poor and cannot
play with other filters.
The "Minimum Phase" filter has a gentle attenuation slope similar to the Slow Rolloff option,
however it exhibits no pre-ringing in the time domain. It can be likened to an analogue filter
applied in the digital domain.
For DSD mode, there are four filters "Normal", "50K", "60K" and "70K" with cutoffs at
47k, 50K, 60k, 70k. The user can adjust the IIR bandwidth by selecting different filters to get
particular sonic nuances.
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or
again to select a different filters,

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