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InFocus Projector ScreenPlay 7210 User Manual

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    Using the keypad buttonsMost buttons are described in detail in other sections, but here is an over-
    view of their functions:
    Pow e r–turns the projector on (page 9) and off (page 9).
    Menu–opens the on-screen menus (page 23).
    Select–confirms choices made in the menus (page 23).
    Up/down arrows–navigates to and adjusts settings in the menus (page 23).
    Auto image–resets the projector to the source.
    Presets–cycles through the 3 available user preset settings (page 26).
    Key s t o n e–adjusts squareness of the image (page 10).
    Brightness–adjusts intensity of the image (page 24).
    Resize–changes the aspect ratio (page 24). 
    Source–changes the active source (page 29). 
    menu navigation buttons 
    						
    							21
    Using the remote controlThe remote uses two (2) provided AAA batteries. They are easily installed 
    by sliding the cover off the remote’s back, aligning the + and - ends of the 
    batteries, sliding them into place, and then replacing the cover.
    To operate, point the remote at the projection screen or at the projector (not 
    at the video device or computer). The range of optimum operation is up to 
    30 feet (9.14m).
    Press the remote’s Menu button to open the projector ’s menu system. Use 
    the arrow buttons to navigate, and the Select button to select features and 
    adjust values in the menus. See page 23 for more info on the menus.
    The remote also has:
    Pow e r button to turn the projector on and off (see page 12 for shut-
    down info)
     backlight button to light the remote’s buttons in the dark
    Brightness and Contrast buttons to adjust the image
    Blank button to display a blank screen instead of the current image (to 
    change the color of the blank screen, see page 30)
    Source buttons to switch among sources (to assign a particular source 
    to a source button, see page 29) and a source toggle
    Resize button to change the Aspect Ratio (see page 24)
    Auto Image button to resynchronize the projector to the source
    Preset button to restore stored settings (see page 26)
    Overscan button to remove noise in a video image (page 26)Troubleshooting the remote Make sure the batteries are installed in the proper orientation and are 
    not dead.
     Make sure you’re pointing the remote at the projector or the screen, not 
    at the video device or the computer, and are within the remote range of 
    30 feet (9.14m).
    backlight button
    navigation buttons 
    						
    							22
    Optimizing video imagesAfter the video device is connected properly and the image is on the screen, 
    you can optimize the image using the onscreen menus. For general informa-
    tion on using the menus, see page 23.
     Change the Aspect ratio. Aspect ratio is the ratio of the image width to 
    image height. TV screens are usually 1.33:1, also known as 4:3. HDTV 
    and most DVDs are 1.78:1, or 16:9. Choose the option that best fits your 
    input source in the menus, or press the Resize button on the remote to 
    cycle through the options. See page 24.
     Adjust the Keystone, Contrast, Brightness, Color, or Tint in the Picture 
    menu. See page 24. 
     Select a different Color Temperature or use the Color Control to adjust 
    the gain and offset of the red, green, and blue color. See page 28.
     Select a specific Color Space or Gamma. See page 26 and page 28.
     Select a different Video Standard. Auto tries to determine the standard 
    of the incoming video. Select a different standard if necessary. See 
    page 28.
     Turn Overscan on to remove noise around the video image. See 
    page 26. 
     Fine tune component inputs using the TrueLife™ adjustments. See 
    page 27.
     Tune colors to your specifications using Blue Only and ADC Calibra-
    tion. See page 31.
     Choose High Power to maximize the light output. See page 29.
     Make sure your DVD player is set for a 16:9 television. See your DVD 
    player ’s user ’s guide for instructions.
    Customizing the projectorYou can customize the projector for your specific setup and needs. See 
    page 29 to page 31 for details on these features.
     For rear projection, turn Rear mode on in the Settings>System menu.
     For ceiling mounted projection, turn Ceiling mode on in the Set-
    tings>System menu. 
     Turn the projector ’s display messages and power-on chime on and off.
     Turn on power saving features. 
     Specify blank screen colors and startup logos. Make the menus translu-
    cent.
     Specify the menu language. 
    						
    							23
    Using the menusTo open the menus, press the menu button on the keypad or remote. (The 
    menus automatically close after 60 seconds if no buttons are pressed.) The 
    Main menu appears. Use the arrow buttons to move up and down to high-
    light the desired submenu, then press the Select button. 
    To change a menu setting, highlight it, press Select, then use the up and 
    down arrow buttons to adjust the value, select an option using radio but-
    tons, or turn the feature on or off using check boxes. Press Select to confirm 
    your changes. Use the arrows to navigate to another setting. When your 
    adjustments are complete, navigate to Previous, then press Select to go to 
    the previous menu; press the Menu button at any time to close the menus. 
    Dots appear before the menu name. The number of dots indicate the menu’s 
    level, ranging from one (the Main menu) to five (the most nested menus). 
    The menus are grouped by usage:
     The Picture menu provides image adjustments.
     The Settings menu provides set-up type adjustments that are not 
    changed often.
     The About menu provides a read-only display of information about the 
    projector and source. 
    Certain menu items may be hidden until a particular source is connected. 
    For example, Tint is only available for NTSC video sources and will be hid-
    den when other sources are active. Other menu items may be grayed out 
    when they are not available. For example, Brightness is grayed out until an 
    image is active.
    Keypad navigation 
    buttons
    Main menuMenu
    button
     
     
    Picture menuSettings menu Dots
    About menu 
    						
    							24
    Picture menuTo adjust the following five settings, highlight the setting, press Select, use 
    the up and down arrows to adjust the values, then press select to confirm 
    the changes. All menu defaults are listed in a table starting on page 38.
    Key s t o n e: adjusts the image vertically and horizontally to make a squarer 
    image. The two keystones ranges are interdependent. The combined num-
    ber of steps for both is 50. If one keystone is set to 65, it is 15 steps above the 
    center position of 50. This leaves 35 steps that the other keystone can vary 
    from the center of 50. This means it cannot go below 15 or above 85.
    Contrast: controls the degree of difference between the lightest and darkest 
    parts of the picture and changes the amount of black and white in the 
    image.
    Brightness: changes the intensity of the image. You can also adjust bright-
    ness from the keypad.
    Color: (video sources only) adjusts a video image from black and white to 
    fully saturated color.
    Tint: (NTSC video sources only) adjusts the red-green color balance in the 
    image.
    Aspect Ratio: Aspect ratio is the ratio of the image width to image height. 
    TV screens are usually 1.33:1, also known as 4:3. HDTV and most DVDs are 
    1.78:1, or 16:9. You can choose Native, 4:3, 16:9, Letterbox, or Natural Wide. 
    The default is 16:9. The goal is to show the most detail on the screen while 
    preserving the ratio of width to height. The native resolution of the projec-
    tor is 1280x720. Use Native, 4:3 or Natural Wide for 4:3 input sources; use 
    Native, 16:9 or Letterbox for 16:9 input. Pressing the Resize button on the 
    remote cycles through these options.
    Native: this mode bypasses the internal scaler, displaying the image with no 
    resizing. Since the native resolution is 1280x720 and 4x3 video images are 
    approximately 640x480, 4x3 images will always be smaller than the display 
    and will be centered in the display. Computer images 1024x768 or smaller 
    will also be centered in the display. If a 16x9 video source or a 1280x1024 or 
    larger computer source is viewed, it will display up to 1280 pixels and 720 
    lines from the center of the input.
    Keystone 
    Picture menu
    Aspect ratio 
    						
    							25
    16:9: the default is 16:9, which preserves the 16:9 aspect ratio and is 
    designed to be used with content that is Enhanced for Widescreen TVs. 
    4:3: resizes the image from its original version to fit a standard 4:3 
    aspect ratio screen. If you have a 4:3 source on a 16:9 screen, the image 
    is placed in a 16:9 space, so black bars appear at the sides of the image.
    Letterbox: preserves the 16:9 aspect ratio. If you have a 16:9 source and 
    screen, the image fills the screen. If your source is letterboxed, the 
    image is expanded to fill the screen.
    Natural Wide: this mode stretches a 4:3 image to fill the entire 16:9 
    screen. The center two-thirds of the image is unchanged; the edges of 
    the image are stretched. The mode is only available when TrueLife is 
    active (see page 27).
    16
    16 99 16:9 image input16:9 image 
    16:9
    aspect ratio16 9
    4 34:3 image input4:3 image on 16:9 screen
    black bars
    black bars
    4:3 aspect ratio
    16 9 letterbox image input
    16:9 image fills 16:9 screen
    black bars
    black bars
    4 3 letterbox
    aspect ratio
    4:3 image fills 16:9 screen
    natural wide
    aspect ratio4:3 image input
    4 3
    16 9 
    						
    							26
    Presets: This allows you to customize settings and save the settings to be 
    restored later. To restore the factory default settings, choose Factory Reset in 
    the Settings>Service menu. 
    To set a preset for the current source, adjust the image, select Save Settings 
    in the Presets menu, then choose Save User 1, 2, or 3. You can recall these 
    settings in the future by selecting the appropriate user presets. 
    Gamma: Gamma tables contain preset intensity configurations optimized 
    for the input source. You can select a gamma table that has been specifically 
    tuned for either film, CRT (Cathode Ray Tube), video, Bright Room, or PC 
    input. (Film input is material originally captured on a film camera, like a 
    movie; video input is material originally captured on a video camera, like a 
    TV show or sporting event.) White Peaking increases the brightness of 
    whites that are near 100%.
    NOTE: Your viewing preferences may vary. Cycle through the gamma 
    options and pick the one you like the best.
    Overscan: (video sources only) removes noise around the video image.
    Save User Presets
    Presets
    GammaOverscan 
    						
    							27 Advanced settings
    The following 4 options are for computer or HDTV sources only. 
    Phase: adjusts the phase of the video signal’s digital conversion.
    Tr a c k i n g: adjusts the frequency of the video signal’s digital conversion. 
    Horizontal/Vertical Position: adjusts the position of the source.
    Sync Threshold Adjust: If a hardware device, such as a DVD player, is not 
    syncing properly with the projector, adjust this option to help it to sync 
    when connected to the projector. 
    Tr u e L i f e: This option refers to Faroudja’s TrueLife processing of the image. 
    All standard definition interlaced video signals (composite, S-video and 
    component) are routed through this processor. Extended and High Defini-
    tion progressive component sources are not routed though this processor by 
    default. You can turn TrueLife on to route these signals through the proces-
    sor and then adjust the following 3 options:
    Chroma Detail: This adjusts the color sharpness.
    Luma Detail: This adjusts the overall sharpness (edge enhancement) of 
    the Luma signal. 
    Chroma Delay: aligns the Luma and Chroma signals.
    CCS: (Cross Color Suppression) processes the signal to remove any color 
    information from the luma portion of the signal. It is On for all composite 
    signals, Off for all component signals, and can be turned on or off for all S-
    video signals.
    Film Mode: controls deinterlacing. If 2:2/3:2 Enable is selected, the deinter-
    lacer attempts to perform a 3:2 pulldown, assuming the source was origi-
    nally created on 24fps film. If the original source is 30fps film, you should 
    select NTSC 2:2 pulldown.
    Noise Reduction: adjusts signal noise reduction. Choose Off to have no 
    noise reduction, choose Auto to have the software determine the amount of 
    noise reduction, or choose Manual and adjust the Level. Skintone Bypass 
    prevents the noise reduction from being performed on skin tones, thus pre-
    venting them from appearing overly softened.
    AdvancedTrueLifeFilm ModeNoise Reduction 
    						
    							28
    Color Space: This option applies to computer and HDTV sources (it won’t 
    appear in the menu for video sources). It allows you to select a color space 
    that has been specifically tuned for the video input. When Auto is selected, 
    the projector automatically determines the standard. To choose a different 
    setting, turn off Auto, then choose RGB for computer sources, choose 
    REC709 for component 1080i or 720p sources, or choose REC601 for compo-
    nent 480p or 576p sources.
    Color Temperature: changes the intensity of the colors. Select a listed 
    value.
    Color Control: allows you to individually adjust the gain (relative warmth 
    of the color) and the offset (the amount of black in the color) of the red, 
    green, and blue colors. 
    Video Standard: When it is set to Auto, the projector attempts to pick the 
    video standard automatically based on the input signal it receives. (The 
    video standard options may vary depending on your region of the world.) If 
    the projector is unable to detect the correct standard, the colors may not 
    look right or the image may appear “torn.” If this happens, manually select 
    a video standard by selecting NTSC, PAL, or SECAM from the Video Stan-
    dard menu.
    VCR: When checked, the VCR option is used to eliminate discoloration of 
    about 25% of the image near the top caused by poor quality input image 
    content.
    Color SpaceColor TemperatureColor ControlVideo Standard 
    						
    							29
    Settings menuSources
    : allows you to assign a particular input to a specific source key on 
    the remote and enables or disables Autosource. When Autosource is not 
    checked, the projector defaults to the last-used source. If no source is found, 
    a blank screen displays. When Autosource is checked, the projector checks 
    the last-used source first at power up. If no signal is present, the projector 
    checks the sources in order until a source is found or until power down. 
    You can use the Source Enable feature to eliminate certain sources from this 
    search, which will speed the search. By default, the check boxes for all 
    sources are checked. Uncheck a source’s box to eliminate it from the search.
    System
    All options in this menu toggle between on and off.
    Rear: reverses the image so you can project from behind a translucent 
    screen.
    Ceiling: turns the image upside down for ceiling-mounted projection.
    NOTE: It is recommended that all final image adjustments in Ceiling 
    mode are made once the unit has fully warmed up (approximately 20 
    minutes).
    Auto Power: When Auto Power is checked, the projector automatically 
    goes into the startup state after the projector receives power. This 
    allows control of ceiling mounted projectors with a wall power switch.
    Display Messages: displays status messages (such as “Searching”) in 
    the lower-left corner of the screen.
    High Power: Turn this on to increase the light output of the lamp. This 
    also shortens lamp life and increases fan noise.
    Sources Settings menu
    Source Enable
    Source 1
    System menu 
    						
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