User`s manual
Safety Information iii
Safety Information
Safety InformationSafety Information
Safety Information
For your safety, please read the guidelines below carefully before you use your phone:
Exposure to radio frequency signals
Your wireless handheld portable telephone is a low power transmitter and receiver. When it is ON,
it receives and also sends out radio frequency (RF) signals.
European and international agencies have set standards and recommendations for the protection
of public exposure to RF electromagnetic energy.
• International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) 1996
• Verband Deutscher Elektringenieure (VDE) DIN- 0848
• Directives of the European Community, Directorate General V in Matters of Radio Frequency
Electromagnetic Energy
• National Radiological Protection Board of the United Kingdom, GS 11, 1988
• American National Standards Institute (ANSI) IEEE. C95.1- 1992
• National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP). Report 86
• Department of Health and Welfare Canada. Safety Code 6
These standards are based on extensive scientific review. For example, over 120 scientists, engi-
neers and physicians from universities, government health agencies and industry reviewed the
available body of research to develop the updated ANSI Standard.
The design of your phone complies with these standards when used normally.
RF Exposure Information (SAR)
This model phone meets the government's requirements for exposure to radio waves.
This phone is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to radio
frequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications Commission of the U.S. Government.
The exposure standard for wireless mobile phones employs a unit of measurement known as the
Specific Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit set by the FCC is 1.6W/kg. *Tests for SAR are
conducted using standard operating positions accepted by the FCC with the phone transmitting at