Pairing With Low Frequency-Motorola Proximity Pairing (Lf-Mpp) Feature - Motorola SRX 2200 MODEL 3.5 User Manual

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The radio could not control the Drop Timer of
Personal Area Networking (PAN), Dial-Up Networking
(DUN), Commercial Off- The-Shelf (COTS) and data
services. It depends on the specifications of these
external devices.
Check with your dealer or system administrator for
more information about these timers.
To establish the Bluetooth Connection, see
with Low Frequency-Motorola Proximity Pairing (LF-
MPP) Feature
Feature
on page 143 .
Pairing with Low Frequency-Motorola Proximity Pairing
(LF-MPP) Feature
Ensure that Bluetooth feature of your radio is on and
the Bluetooth tones are enabled.
Bluetooth tones, Bluetooth menu and preprogrammed
buttons must be preprogrammed by a qualified radio
technician. Check with your dealer or system
administrator for more information.
The range of Bluetooth operation when using a MCW
accessory is 10 meters line-of-sight communication.
This is an unobstructed path between the location of
the signal transmitter (your radio) and the location of
142
the receiver (your device or accessory).
English
on page 142 or
Standard Pairing
Obstacles that can cause an obstruction in the line-of-
sight include trees, buildings, mountains, cars and
etc.
It is not recommended that you leave your radio
behind and expect your accessory to work with a high
degree of reliability when they are separated.
At the fringe areas of reception, both voice and tone
Pairing
quality will start to sound "garbled" or "broken". To
correct this problem, simply position the accessory
and radio closer to each other (within the 10 meter
defined range) to re-establish clear audio reception.
Note:
Once a COTS headset is paired to your radio,
it is always connected. Therefore the battery
life of the accessory is aligned with the Talk
Time power consumption, not the Standby
Time consumption.
Turn on the accessory. Then, place it close to the
radio aligning the Bluetooth Pairing Location (a
blue dot) on the radio to the Bluetooth Pairing
Location (a blue dot) on the accessory.
If the pairing process is successful, you hear an
incremental-pitched tone. The radio begins to
connect to the device.

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