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EN
• Closed captioning production companies may broadcast pro-
grams without correcting the misspelling in a live broadcast.
•
Captions that are delayed a few seconds behind the actual dialogue
are common for live broadcasts. Most captioning production compa-
nies can display a dialogue to a maximum of 220 words per minute. If
a dialogue exceeds that rate, selective editing is used to ensure that
the captions remain up-to-date with the current TV screen dialogue.
• Interference from buildings or weather conditions may cause
captioning to be incomplete.
• Broadcasting station may shorten the program to insert adver-
tisement. The closed caption decoder cannot read the informa-
tion of the shortened program.
• The videotape may be illegally copied, or the caption signal
might not have been read during copying.
• “Text” mode is selected for caption. Select “CC1”, “CC2”, “CC3”,
“CC4” or “Off”.
Problems with Closed Caption Feature
Misspelled captions are displayed.
Captions are not entirely displayed, or
captions are delayed behind the dia-
logue.
Captions are displayed as a white
box.
No caption is displayed in the Closed
Caption-supported program.
No caption is displayed when playing
the videotape containing captions.
Black box is displayed in the screen.