Troubleshooting Guide

Table Of Contents
(49,1)
[ Edit: 2018/ 4/ 26 Model: AIVINJ-N ]
found on the inserted CD. Check the
data in your CD.
USB (Universal Serial Bus) CON-
NECTION PORT
AIVINJN1-B14770CC-B357-4196-BAA4-5BEF948ED871
WARNING
AIVINJN1-D638FED5-E54C-411B-A0EC-FC59085277A5
Do not connect, disconnect or operate
the USB device while driving. Doing so
can be a distraction. If distracted you
could lose control of your vehicle and
cause an accident or serious injury.
CAUTION
AIVINJN1-29BDBF9A-FCE3-40F6-9211-F2C802EB06DC
. Do not force the USB device into
the USB connection port. Inserting
the USB device tilted or up-side-
down into the port may damage
the port. Make sure that the USB
device is connected correctly into
the USB connection port.
. Do not grab the USB connection
port cover (if so equipped) when
pulling the USB device out of the
port. This could damage the port
and the cover.
. Do not leave the USB cable in a
place where it can be pulled unin-
tentionally. Pulling the cable may
damage the port.
The vehicle is not equipped with a USB
device. USB devices should be purchased
separately as necessary.
This system cannot be used to format
USB devices. To format a USB device, use a
personal computer.
This system supports various USB mem-
ory devices, USB hard drives and iPod®
players. Some USB devices may not be
supported by this system.
. Partitioned USB devices may not be
played correctly.
. Some characters used in other lan-
guages (Chinese, Japanese, etc.) are
not displayed properly on the display.
Using English language characters
with a USB device is recommended.
General notes for USB use:
Refer to your device manufacturer’s own-
er information regarding the proper care
of the device.
Notes for iPod® use:
iPod® is a trademark of Apple Inc., regis-
tered in the U.S. and other countries.
. Improperly plugging in the iPod® may
cause a checkmark to be displayed on
and off (flickering). Always make sure
that the iPod® is connected properly.
. Audiobooks may not play in the same
order as they appear on an iPod®.
COMPRESSED AUDIO FILES (MP3/
WMA/AAC)
AIVINJN1-59506932-77E0-4626-8C21-4A60DD222070
Explanation of terms
AIVINJN1-EB91730C-D0C7-441C-9028-C9C6F27A417B
. MP3 MP3 is short for Moving Pictures
Experts Group Audio Layer 3. MP3 is
the most well-known compressed di-
gital audio file format. This format
allows for near “CD quality” sound,
but at a fraction of the size of normal
audio files. MP3 conversion of an audio
track can reduce the file size by
approximately a 10:1 ratio (Sampling:
44.1 kHz, Bit rate: 128 kbps) with
virtually no perceptible loss in quality.
The compression reduces certain
parts of sound that seem inaudible to
most people.
. WMA Windows Media Audio (WMA) is
a compressed audio format created by
Microsoft as an alternative to MP3. The
WMA codec offers greater file com-
pression than the MP3 codec, enabling
storage of more digital audio tracks in
the same amount of space when
compared to MP3s at the same level
of quality.
3. Audio system
Condition:
3-5