Using The Closed Caption Decoder - Mitsubishi VS-5075 Owner's Manual

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Using
the closed
caption
decoder
Important:
Important:
Important:
Many broadcasters
now supply dosed
captioning
:information
along
with their regular
broadcasts.
Your TV can decode that informatioI
and display
it on the TV screer._
There are two types of captionin_;
that broadcasters
can send:
"standard"
and "text.':
Standard
captioning
is related
to the program
that is being
shown. Standard
captioning
us.u_dly follows tile dialogue
of the
characters
on-screen.
Text captioning
often contains
information
such as weather
or
news. Text captioning
blocks oat your view of the program
you are
watching.
Your TV can decode four different
"standard
captioning"
signals
and four different
"text captioruing"
signals
from each TV station.
However,
each station
may be broadcasting
only one or two
captioning
signals,
or none at all.
When setting
the decoder you can choose:
• to display
one of four "standa:rd
captioning"
signals
( _-_ :1,
_-d :2, _
:3, _
:4),
• to display
one of four "text captioning"
signals
([CC7: Text 1,
Text 2, _-_ : Text 3, [C_]: Text 4),
• to display
captions
when muting
( _
: When Muting),
• or to turn
the captions
off ( C[_ : Off).
If you select "_-_ : When Muting,"
the standard
captioning
signal
( _
:1) will appear
whenever
you use the MUTE button.
If you set the decoder to a "standard"
caption
setting
and tune to a
broadcaster
that is not sending
a caption
signal, no captions
will
appear.
If you set the decoder to a "text" setting
and tune to a broadcaster
that is not sending
a text signal, a large black: rectangle
will block
your screen.
The content
of captions
are determined
by the broadcaster.
If your
captions
show strange
charact,_rs,
misspellings,
or odd grammar,
il
is not a malfunction
of the Projection
TV.
74
Chapter
3: Operating
Your Projection
TV

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