Pioneer DVD-V5000 DVD Player User Manual


 
40
08 Video Adjust menu
Sharpness Adjusts the sharpness of the
mid-frequency (less detailed) elements in
the picture. (This setting is only effective
when Fine Focus is On.)
Chroma Level Adjusts how saturated
colors appear.
Hue Adjusts the overall color balance
between red and green. (This is only
effective when the player is connected using
the VIDEO OUT or S-VIDEO OUT jacks.)
4 Press ENTER to save the preset and exit
the Video Adjust screen.
Creating your own progressive
output presets
These presets are available when the video
output is set to progressive. (Use the front panel
PROGRESSIVE button to switch between
interlace and progressive video output. See also
page 15)
1 Select one of the Memory presets (see
above).
2 Press (cursor down) to select Detailed
Settings then press ENTER.
P. Memory1
Detailed Settings
Video Adjust
3 Adjust the picture quality settings.
Recall Settings
PureCinema
Sharpness
Contrast
Brightness
Chroma Level
Hue
P.Memory1
Auto
Interlace Memory 1 (P. Memory 1)
soft fine
off fine
min
max
green
red
min max
Use the / buttons (cursor up/down) to
select a setting.
Use the / buttons (cursor left/right) to
adjust the current setting.
Press DISPLAY to switch between full and
single view.
You can change the preset number from the
Recall Settings menu item.
You can adjust any or all of the following picture
quality settings:
PureCinema When watching DVD movies,
PureCinema optimizes the picture quality.
The default setting is Auto, but if the
picture appears unnatural, then set to On or
Off, as appropriate.
Sharpness Adjusts the sharpness of the
mid-frequency (less detailed) elements in
the picture. (This setting is only effective
when Fine Focus is On.)
Contrast Adjusts the contrast between
light and dark elements in the picture.
Brightness Adjusts the overall brightness
of the picture.
Chroma Level Adjusts how saturated
colors appear.
Hue Adjusts the overall color balance
between red and green.
4 Press ENTER to save the preset and exit
the Video Adjust screen.
Video on a DVD discs may be either video
material (originally shot on video) or film
material (originally shot on film). Video
material has a frame rate of 30 frames/
sec.(NTSC), compared with 24 frames/sec.
for film. This player converts film material to
60 frames/sec. (in progressive scan mode).
PureCinema adjusts the picture so that it
matches more closely the picture quality of
a cinema screen.
You can see whether video on a DVD disc is
film or video material by displaying the video
transmission rate (see page 17). If a hash
mark (#) appears next to the transmission
rate display, it is film material.