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HP h6300 User Manual

Page 178

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Regulatory Notice


User’s Guide

Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF) Signals your wireless phone is a radio
transmitter and receiver. It 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. These limits are part
of

comprehensive guidelines and establish permitted levels of RF energy for

the general

population. The guidelines are based on the safety standards

previously set by both U.S. and

international standards bodies:

This EUT has been shown to be capable of compliance for localized specific
absorption rate

(SAR) for uncontrolled environment/general population

exposure limits specified in ANSI/IEEE

Std. C95.1-1992 and had been tested

in accordance with the measurement procedures

specified in FCC/OET

Bulletin 65 Supplement C (2001) and IEEE Std. 1528-200X (Draft 6.5,

January 2002).

Ministry of Health (Canada), Safety Code 6. The standards

include a substantial safety margin

designed to assure the safety of all persons,

regardless of age and health. 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 *.

* In the U.S. and Canada, the SAR limit for mobile phones used by the public
is 1.6 watts/kg

(W/kg) averaged over one gram of tissue. The standard

incorporates a substantial margin of

safety to give additional protection for the

public and to account for any variations in.