Symptoms
• A longer readout time is required
("Reading" keeps flashing on the display).
• Tracks do not play back in the order you
have intended them to play.
• The elapsed playing time is not correct.
• "Please Eject" appears on the display.
• "Not Support" appears on the display and
track skips.
• Correct characters are not displayed (e.g.
album name).
• Noise is generated.
• Tracks cannot play back as you have
intended them to play.
• "Reading" keeps flashing on the display.
• "No File" flashes on the display.
• "No USB" appears on the display.
• "Not Support" appears on the display and
track skips.
• "Read failed" appears on the display.
44
Remedies/Causes
Do not use too many hierarchical levels and folders.
The playback order is determined when the files are
recorded.
This sometimes occurs during playback. This is caused by
how the tracks are recorded on the disc.
Insert a disc that contains MP3/WMA/AAC tracks.
Skip to the next track encoded in an appropriate format
or to the next non-copy-protected WMA track.
This unit can only display letters (capital: A – Z,
small: a – z), numbers, and a limited number of symbols
(see page 42).
• The track played back is not a playable file format
(MP3/WMA/AAC/WAV). Skip to another file.
• Do not add the extension code <.mp3>, <.wma>,
<.m4a>, or <.wav> to non-MP3/WMA/AAC/WAV
tracks.
Playback order may differs from the one played back
using other players.
• Readout time varies depending on the USB device.
• Do not use too many hierarchy, folders and empty
folders.*
• Turn off the power then on again.
• Do not pull out or connect the USB device repeatedly
while "Reading" is displayed on the display.
* Folder that is phisically empty or folder that contains
data but does not contain valid MP3/WMA/AAC/WAV
track.
Connect a USB device that contains tracks encoded in an
appropriate format.
The track is unplayable.
The connected USB device may be malfunctioning,
or may not have been formatted correctly. The files
included in the USB device are corrupted.