Nissan X-Trail e-POWER 2023 Owners Manual

7.9.1.4. USB device with MP3/WMA/AAC

Terms

  • MP3 — MP3 is short for Moving Pictures Experts Group Audio Layer 3. MP3 is the most well known compressed digital audio file format. This format allows for near “CD quality” sound, but at a fraction of the size of normal audio files. MP3 conversion of an audio track from CD can reduce the file size by approximately 10:1 ratio (Sampling: 44.1 kHz, Bit rate: 128 kbps) with virtually no perceptible loss in quality. MP3 compression removes the redundant and irrelevant parts of a sound signal that the human ear doesn’t hear.

  • WMA — Windows Media Audio (WMA) is a compressed audio format created by Microsoft as an alternative to MP3. The WMA codec offers greater file compression than the MP3 codec, enabling storage of more digital audio tracks in the same amount of space when compared to MP3s at the same level of quality.

    This product is protected by certain intellectual property rights of Microsoft Corporation and third parties. Use or distribution of such technology outside of this product is prohibited without a licence from Microsoft or an authorised Microsoft subsidiary and third parties.

  • AAC — Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) is a compressed audio format. AAC offers greater file compression than MP3 and enables music file creation and storage at the same quality as MP3.

  • Bit rate — Bit rate denotes the number of bits per second used by a digital music files. The size and quality of a compressed digital audio file is determined by the bit rate used when encoding the file.

  • Sampling frequency — Sampling frequency is the rate at which the samples of a signal are converted from analog to digital (A/D conversion) per second.

  • Multisession — Multisession is one of the methods for writing data to media. Writing data once to the media is called a single session, and writing more than once is called a multisession.

  • ID3/WMA Tag — The ID3/WMA tag is the part of the encoded MP3 or WMA file that contains information about the digital music file such as song title, artist, album title, encoding bit rate, track time duration, etc. ID3 tag information is displayed on the Album/Artist/Track title line on the display.

* Windows® and Windows Media® are registered trademarks and/or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States of America and/or other countries.

Playback order

image

Music playback order of the USB device with MP3/WMA/AAC is as illustrated above.

  • The folder names not containing MP3/WMA/AAC files are not shown in the display.

  • If there is a file in the top level of the device, [Root Folder] is displayed.

  • The playback order is the order in which the files were written by the writing software, so the files might not play in the desired order.

Specification chart

Supported media

USB2.0

Supported file systems

ISO9660 LEVEL1, ISO9660 LEVEL2, Romeo, Joliet

* ISO9660 Level 3 (packet writing) is not supported.

* Files saved using the Live File System Component (on a Windows Vista-based computer) are not supported.

Supported versions*1

MP3

Version

MPEG1, MPEG2

Sampling frequency

8 kHz - 48 kHz

Bit rate

32 kbps - 448 kbps, VBR*4

WMA*3

Version

WMA7, WMA8, WMA9, WMA9 Pro (except WMA9 Lossless, WMA9 Voice)

Sampling frequency

8 kHz - 48 kHz

Bit rate

5 kbps - 320 kbps, VBR*4

AAC

Version

MPEG4 – AAC

Sampling frequency

8 kHz - 48 kHz

Bit rate

32 kbps - 192 kbps, VBR*4

Tag information (Song title and Artist name)

ID3 tag VER1.0, VER1.1, VER2.2, VER2.3, VER2.4 (MP3 only)

WMA tag (WMA only)

Folder levels

Folder levels: 8, Folders: 2500 (including root folder), Files: 32000

Displayable character codes*2

01: ASCII, 02: ISO-8859-1, 03: UNICODE (UTF-16 BOM Big Endian), 04: UNICODE (UTF-16 Non-BOM Big Endian), 05: UNICODE (UTF-8), 06: UNICODE (Non-UTF-16 BOM Little Endian)

  • Files created with a combination of 48 kHz sampling frequency and 64 kbps bit rate cannot be played.
  • Available codes depend on what kind of media, versions and information are going to be displayed.
  • Protected WMA files (DRM) cannot be played.
  • When VBR files are played, the playback time may not be displayed correctly. WMA7 and WMA8 are not applied to VBR.

Troubleshooting guide

Symptom

Cause and Countermeasure

Cannot play

USB device was inserted incorrectly.

Check if there is condensation inside the player, and if there is, wait until the condensation is gone (about 1 hour) before using the player.

If there is a mixture of music files and compressed audio files on a USB device, only the music files will be played.

Files with extensions other than “.MP3”, “.WMA”, “.M4A”, “.mp3”, “.wma” or “.m4a” cannot be played. In addition, the character codes and number of characters for folder names and file names should be in compliance with the specifications.

Check if the USB device is protected by copyright.

It takes a relatively long time before the music starts playing.

If there are many folder or file levels on the MP3/WMA/AAC files, some time may be required before the music starts playing.

If there are many folder or file levels on the USB device, some time may be required before the music starts playing.

Music cuts off or skips

The writing software and hardware combination might not match, or the writing speed, writing depth, writing width, etc., might not match the specifications of the system. Try using the slowest writing speed.

Skipping with high bit rate files

Skipping may occur with large quantities of data, such as for high bit rate data.

Move immediately to the next song when playing.

When a non-MP3/WMA/AAC file has been given an extension of “.MP3”, “.WMA”, “.M4A”, “.mp3”, “.wma” or “.m4a” when play is prohibited by copyright protection, the player will skip to the next song.

The songs do not play back in the desired order.

The playback order is the order in which the files were written by the writing software, so the files might not play in the desired order.

Random/Shuffle may be active on the audio system or on a USB device.

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