Specifications
Chapter 7. Playback Settings 56
Fade Out Delay The “fade out delay” is the length of time between when the crossfade
process begins and when the old track begins to fade out.
Fade Out Duration The length of time, in seconds, that it takes your music to fade out
once the Fade Out Delay has ended.
Fade Out Mode If set to Crossfade, one song will fade out and the next song will
simultaneously fade in. If set to Mix, the ending song will continue to play as
normal until its end, while the starting song will fade in from under it. Mix mode
is not used for manual track skips, even if it is selected here.
Note: The rules above apply except in the instance where Fade Out Delay plus Fade
b
Out Duration is less then Fade In Delay (which would create a gap in the audio).
In this case, the Fade In Delay is reduced to eliminate the gap.
The graphic below illustrates how the different settings work in practice.
7.8 Replaygain
This allows you to control the replaygain function. The purpose of replaygain is to
adjust the volume of the music played so that all songs (or albums, depending on your
settings) have the same apparent volume. This prevents sudden changes in volume when
changing between songs recorded at different volume levels. For replaygain to work, the
songs must have been processed by a program that adds replaygain information to the
ID3 tags (or Vorbis tags).
Note: APEv2 tags are not currently supported.
b
Options for replaygain are:
The Rockbox manual Sansa e200 and e200R Series










