Installation
Positioning the unit
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Place the AVP700 on a level, rm surface.
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Avoid placing the unit in direct sunlight or near sources of heat or damp.
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Do not place the unit on top of a power ampli er or other source of heat.
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Ensure adequate ventilation. Do not place the unit in an enclosed space such as a bookcase or
closed cabinet unless there is good provision for ventilation. The AVP700 may run warm, even
during normal operation.
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Make sure the IR receiver in the centre of the front panel display is unobstructed, otherwise use
of the remote control will be impaired. If line-of-sight is impractical, an infrared remote repeater
can be used with the rear panel IR connector (this is described later in this handbook).
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Do not place your record deck on top of this unit.
Record decks are very sensitive to the noise generated by mains power supplies, which will be
heard as ‘hum’ if the record deck is too close.
Notes on installing the AVP700
The inputs are named to make it easier to reference when connecting source components to the AVP700
(e.g., a DVD or VCR), but all inputs have the same circuitry. This means that there is no reason why you
should not connect a different device from that labelled to any of the inputs. For example, if you had two
DVD players and the AV input was not being used, then the second DVD player could be connected to
the AV input.
Cables
We recommend the use of high quality screened analogue, digital and video cables, since inferior
quality cables will degrade the overall quality of your system. Use only cables that are designed for the
particular application as other cables will have different impedance characteristics that will degrade
performance (for example, do not use cabling intended for audio use to carry video signals). All cables
should be kept as short as is practically possible.
Video and digital connections must be made with cables that are designed for this purpose, i.e., coaxial
cable with a 75Ω impedance. If substandard cables are used you may suffer from poor picture quality
such as ghost images and/or grainy picture quality (snow).
Speaker cables should be kept short to ensure ef cient power transmission and avoid audible distortion.
It is good practice when connecting your equipment to ensure that the mains power supply cabling is
kept as far away as possible from your audio and video cables, as this will provide the best sound and
picture quality. Failure to do so may result in unwanted noise in the audio and video signals.