Fcc Rf Exposure Information - LG E900h User Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for E900h:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Available languages

Available languages

For Your Safety

FCC RF Exposure Information

WARNING
Read this information before operating
the phone.
In August 1996, the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC)
of the United States, with its action
in Report and Order FCC 96-326,
adopted an updated safety standard
for human exposure to radio frequency
(RF) electromagnetic energy emitted
by FCC regulated transmitters. Those
guidelines are consistent with the safety
standard previously set by both U.S. and
international standards bodies.
The design of this phone complies with
the FCC guidelines and these international
standards.
CAUTION
Use only the supplied and approved
antenna. Use of unauthorized antennas
or modifi cations could impair call
quality, damage the phone, void your
warranty and/or result in violation of FCC
regulations. Do not use the phone with a
damaged antenna. If a damaged antenna
comes into contact with skin, a minor burn
may result. Contact your local dealer for a
replacement antenna.
60 LG-E900h | User Guide
Body-worn Operation
This device was tested for typical body-
worn operations with the back of the
phone kept 2cm (0.79 inches) between
the user's body and the back of the
phone. To comply with FCC RF exposure
requirements, a minimum separation
distance of 2cm (0.79 inches) 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 2cm (0.79 inches) separation
distance between the user's body and the
back of the phone, and have not been
tested for typical body-worn operations
may not comply with FCC RF exposure
limits and should be avoided.
Vehicle Mounted External
Antenna (optional, if available)
A minimum separation distance of 20cm (8
inches) must be maintained between the
user/bystander and the vehicle mounted
external antenna to satisfy FCC RF exposure
requirements. For more information about
RF exposure, visit the FCC website at www.
fcc.gov

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents