beautypg.com

Dab radio – Philips DAB FM radio AE5900 User Manual

Page 9

background image

DAB Radio

Alarm On/Off

1

In “Alarm On/Off ” mode, press

1

/ 2

to enter

options:
On -> Off

2

Press SELECT to confirm the setting.

➜ When the alarm is switched on,

appears.

➜ When the alarm is switched off,

appears.

SNOOZE
Make sure you have correctly set the time
and alarm.

1

In “Snooze” mode, press

1

/ 2

to enter

options:

5 minutes-> 10 minutes- >
15 minutes- >20 minutes- > off

2

Press SELECT to confirm the setting.
➜ The alarm repeats at the selected time.

SLEEP

1

In “SLEEP” mode, press

1

/ 2

to enter

options:
15 minutes-> 30 minutes->
45 minutes-> 60 minutes-> off

2

Press SELECT to confirm the setting.

appears. At the selected time, the set

switches to standby mode.

The clock informa-

tion is displayed on the LCD.

➜ The alarm/timer setting still works.
Auto - set clock
(only available in DAB mode)

In DAB mode, the clock of the set is auto-set
according to the time information of the cur-
rent station.

1

In “Auto - set clock” mode, press

1

/ 2

to

enter options:
No -> Yes

2

Press SELECT to confirm the setting.

Helpful hints:

In DAB mode, before you set clock, make
sure you have set “Auto-set clock” option as
“NO”. Otherwise, “Auto-set NO at first” is
displayed.

Set clock

1

In “Set clock” mode, press

1

/ 2

to set time

➜ Press SELECT to switch hour setting to

minute setting.

2

Press SELECT to confirm the setting.

Helpful hints:

If there is no power supply for more than 3
to 5 minutes, all the

time

settings are cleared.

Kitchen time

1

In “Kitchen time” mode, press

1

/ 2

to select

desired time.

The maximum time is 120 minutes.

2

Press SELECT to confirm the setting.

appears.

➜ At the selected time, alarm rings for 5
minutes unless you interrupt it by pressing
TIMER.

The volume of the alarm increases from low
to high.

Helpful hints:

Another way to access “Kitchen time” is to
press TIMER on the set.

Dynamic Range Control (DRC)

DRC adds or removes a degree of compen-
sation for the differences in the dynamic
range between radio stations. For example, a
station broadcasting popular music may have
a high level of compensation applied since the
emphasis is on a constant high listening level,
whereas a station broadcasting classical music
will have little or no compensation as the lis-
tener requires all of the highs and lows in the
music to define the detail.

There are three levels of compensation:
DRC 0: No compensation applied.
DRC 1: Maximum compensation applied
(This is the default.).
DRC1/2: Medium compensation applied.

OFF

ON

AE5900_05_CCR 2007.8.31 14:44 Page 9