From 7da37b8f9c26b5497be61ced964c68383bce39f0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dan Everton Date: Sat, 24 Nov 2007 11:07:44 +0000 Subject: Update the manual for the iPod Video changes to hardware equalizer. git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@15787 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657 --- manual/configure_rockbox/sound_settings.tex | 42 +++++++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 25 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) diff --git a/manual/configure_rockbox/sound_settings.tex b/manual/configure_rockbox/sound_settings.tex index e292556..4f28694 100644 --- a/manual/configure_rockbox/sound_settings.tex +++ b/manual/configure_rockbox/sound_settings.tex @@ -34,14 +34,26 @@ change to customise your listening experience. frequencies below 300Hz. Bass boost can be set from 0 to 24 dB in increments of 2 dB. A setting of 0 means that low frequencies are unaltered (flat response).} - \opt{ipodnano,ipodcolor,ipodvideo}{This emphasises or suppresses the + \opt{ipodnano,ipodcolor}{This emphasises or suppresses the lower frequency (bass) sounds in the track. 0dB means that bass in unaltered (flat response). The minimum setting is -6dB and the maximum is 9dB.} + \opt{ipodvideo}{This emphasises or suppresses the + lower frequency (bass) sounds in the track. 0dB means that bass in unaltered + (flat response). The minimum setting is -12dB and the maximum is 12dB.} \opt{x5}{This emphasises or suppresses the lower frequency (bass) sounds in the track. 0dB means that bass in unaltered (flat response). The minimum setting is -24dB and the maximum is 24dB.} \opt{sansa,h10,h10_5gb}{\fixme{add platform specific information here}} +\opt{ipodvideo}{ +\section{Bass Cutoff} + This setting controls the frequency below which the bass gain + applies. The minimum setting is 1 and the maximum setting is 4 where a value + of 1 indicates the lowest possible cutoff and a value of 4 indicates the highest + possible cutoff. The actual cutoff frequency values will vary with sample rate. +} + + \section{Treble} \opt{player,recorder,recorderv2fm,ondio}{This emphasises or suppresses the higher (treble) sounds in the track. 0 means that treble sounds are @@ -50,14 +62,25 @@ change to customise your listening experience. frequencies above 1.5kHz. Treble boost can be set from 0 to 6 dB in increments of 2 dB. A setting of 0 means that high frequencies are unaltered (flat response).} - \opt{ipodnano,ipodcolor,ipodvideo}{This setting emphasises or suppresses + \opt{ipodnano,ipodcolor}{This setting emphasises or suppresses the higher frequency (treble) sounds in the track. 0dB means that treble is unaltered (flat response). The minimum setting -6dB and the maximum is 9dB.} + \opt{ipodvideo}{This setting emphasises or suppresses + the higher frequency (treble) sounds in the track. 0dB means that treble is + unaltered (flat response). The minimum setting -12dB and the maximum is 12dB.} \opt{x5}{This setting emphasises or suppresses the higher frequency (treble) sounds in the track. 0dB means that treble is unaltered (flat response). The minimum setting -24dB and the maximum is 24dB.} \opt{sansa,h10,h10_5gb}{\fixme{add platform specific information here}} +\opt{ipodvideo}{ +\section{Treble Cutoff} + This setting controls the frequency above which the treble gain + applies. The minimum setting is 1 and the maximum setting is 4 where a value + of 1 indicates the lowest possible cutoff and a value of 4 indicates the highest + possible cutoff. The actual cutoff frequency values will vary with sample rate. +} + \section{Balance} This setting controls the balance between the left and right channels. The default, 0, means that the left and right outputs are equal in volume. @@ -385,21 +408,6 @@ settings. \end{description} } -\opt{ipodvideo}{ -\section{Hardware EQ} - -This function controls the EQ that is built into the hardware of your -\playerman{}. The hardware EQ functions similarly to the Graphical EQ in that -it allows adjustment of several parameters. However, unlike the Graphical EQ, -the Hardware EQ allows the user to choose from a limited number of settings -for ``Center Frequency'' and ``Bandwidth'' (``Bandwidth'' in the Hardware EQ -is similar to ``Q'' in the Graphical EQ). - -\note{While the \setting{Hardware EQ} menu shows Low Shelf, three peaking -filters, and High Shelf, the peaking filters are not currently operational.} - -} - \opt{SWCODEC}{ \section{Dithering} This setting controls the dithering and noise shaping functionality of Rockbox. -- cgit v1.1