User manual
46
her phone while operating a vehicle.
9. Use your wireless phone to help others in emergencies. Your wireless phone provides you a perfect opportunity
to be a “Good Samaritan” in your community. If you see an auto accident, crime in progress or other serious
emergency where lives are in danger, call 911 or other local emergency number, as you would want others to do
for you.
Consumer Information on SAR
(Specific Absorption Rate)
This Model Phone Meets the Government’s Requirements for Exposure to Radio Waves. Your wireless phone is a radio
transmitter and receiver. It is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to
radiofrequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of the U.S. Government. These
FCC exposure limits are derived from the recommendations of two expert organizations, the National Council on
Radiation Protection and Measurement (NCRP) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). In both
cases, the recommendations were developed by scientific and engineering experts drawn from industry, government,
and academia after extensive reviews of the scientific literature related to the biological effects of RF energy. The
exposure limit for wireless mobile phones employs a unit of measurement known as the Specific Absorption Rate, or
SAR. The SAR is a measure of the rate of absorption of RF energy by the human body expressed in units of watts per
kilogram (W/kg). The FCC requires wireless phones to comply with a safety limit of 1.6 watts per kilogram (1.6 W/kg).
The FCC exposure limit incorporates a substantial margin of safety to give additional protection to the public and to
account for any variations in measurements. Tests for SAR are conducted using standard operating positions specified
by the FCC with the phone transmitting at its highest certified power level in all tested frequency bands. Although SAR is
determined at the highest certified power level, the actual SAR level of the phone while operating can be well below the
maximum value. Because the phone is designed to operate at multiple power levels to use only the power required to
reach the network, generally, the closer you are to a wireless base station antenna, the lower the power output. Before a
phone model is available for sale to the public, it must be tested and certified to the FCC that it does not exceed the limit
established by the government adopted requirement for safe exposure. The tests are performed in positions and
locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on the body) as required by the FCC for each model. This device was tested for
typical body-worn operations with the back of the phone kept 0.59 inches (1.5 cm) between the user’s body and the back
of the phone. To comply with FCC RF exposure requirements, a minimum separation distance of 0.59 inches (1.5 cm)
must be maintained between the user's body and the back of the phone. Third-party belt clips, holsters, and similar
accessories containing metallic components should not be used.
Body-worn accessories that cannot maintain 0.59 inches (1.5 cm) separation distance between the user's body and the
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