Very clear scan, I recommend it. Definitely a must have for any 3362 owner.
Alpine could have written a slightly more complete manual, though. It's already pretty huge, but the unit has so many functions, I feel some more explanation would have been better.
Yamaha's manual of their comparable YDSP-1 is a little better in my opinion.
Correct manual received and of good quality but the contents of the file for the Service Manual for the same monitor is for a 20" TV not the RGB Monitor.
The owners manual for the Pioneer VSX-D603S was exactly what I needed. I received it in a timely manor and it was priced fairly. I definately will use your servise again. Thank You
This is a great manual. It was easy to read and very accurate. The size of the manual is small so email is no problem. I highly recommend it. The manual is very hard to find other than this website.
Text excerpt from page 35 (click to view)
Recording images (basic)
Taking Pictures using the Built-in Flash
[Preparation] � Set the mode dial except for [ (P25) ]/[ ].
1
1 2
Press [ Flash. Press [
OPEN] button to open the
].
2
� Every time you press [ ], the available settings will appear as shown below. (There are settings that cannot be set according to the REC mode. Those that cannot be set are not displayed when pressing [ ]. Refer to the table on the left.)
: AUTO The flash fires automatically according to the lighting condition. : AUTO/Red-eye reduction The flash fires automatically according to the recording situation. It reduces the red-eye phenomenon (when a subject�s eyes appear red in flash light). Use it when you take pictures of people or animals in low lighting conditions. : Forced ON The flash fires every time a picture is captured. Use this setting when your subject is back-lit or under fluorescent light. : Slow sync./Red-eye reduction When you take a picture with a dark background landscape, it makes the flash fire and the shutter speed slow, so that the dark background landscape will become bright. Simultaneously it reduces the red-eye phenomenon. We recommend that you use a tripod.