User's Manual

Coolpad Quattro
®
II 4G Health/Safety/Warranty Guide 23
driving; if necessary, suspend the call in heavy traffic or hazardous weather conditions. Rain, sleet, snow, and ice can be hazardous,
but so is heavy traffic. As a driver, your first responsibility is to pay attention to the road.
4. Make sure you place your wireless phone within easy reach and where you can reach it without removing your eyes from the road.
If you get an incoming call at an inconvenient time, if possible, let your voicemail answer it for you.
5. Dial sensibly and assess the traffic; if possible, place calls when you are not moving or before pulling into traffic. Try to plan your
calls before you begin your trip or attempt to coincide your calls with times you may be at a stop sign, red light, or otherwise
stationary. But if you need to dial while driving, follow this simple tip - dial only a few numbers, check the road and your mirrors,
then continue.
6. Don’t take notes or look up phone numbers while driving. If you are reading an address book or business card, or writing a “to-do”
list while driving a car, you are not watching where you are going. Use common sense. Do not get caught in a dangerous situation
because you are reading or writing and not paying attention to the road or nearby vehicles.
7. Use your wireless phone to call for help. Your wireless phone is one of the greatest tools you can own to protect yourself and your
family in dangerous situations -- with your phone at your side, help is only three numbers away. Dial 911 or other local emergency
number in the case of fire, traffic accident, road hazard, or medical emergency. Remember, it’s a free call on your wireless phone!
8. Do not engage in stressful or emotional conversations that may be distracting. Stressful or emotional conversations and driving do
not mix; they are distracting and even dangerous when you are behind the wheel of a car. Make people you are talking with aware
you are driving and if necessary, suspend conversations which have the potential to divert your attention from the road.
Call roadside assistance or a special wireless non-emergency assistance number when necessary. Certain situations you encounter
while driving may require attention, but are not urgent enough to merit a call for emergency services. But you can still use your
wireless phone to lend a hand. If you see a broken-down vehicle posing no serious hazard, a broken traffic signal, a minor traffic
accident where no one appears injured or a vehicle you know to be stolen, call roadside assistance or other special non-emergency
wireless number. The above tips are meant as general guidelines. Before deciding to use your mobile device while operating a