Nextel comm i365 Benutzerhandbuch

Seite von 239
Impo
rtant Saf
e
ty
 Inf
o
rmation
203
Turning Off Your Phone in Dangerous Areas
To avoid interfering with blasting operations, turn your phone 
off when in a blasting area or in other areas with signs 
indicating two-way radios should be turned off. Construction 
crews often use remote-control RF devices to set off explosives.
Turn your phone off when you’re in any area that has a 
potentially explosive atmosphere. Although it’s rare, your phone 
and accessories could generate sparks. Sparks can cause an 
explosion or fire, resulting in bodily injury or even death. These 
areas are often, but not always, clearly marked. They include:
Fueling areas such as gas stations.
Below deck on boats.
Fuel or chemical transfer or storage facilities.
Areas where the air contains chemicals or particles such 
as grain, dust, or metal powders.
Any other area where you would normally be advised to 
turn off your vehicle’s engine.
Restricting Children’s Access to Your Phone
Your phone is not a toy. Do not allow children to play with it as 
they could hurt themselves and others, damage the phone or 
make calls that increase your invoice.
Using Your Phone With a Hearing 
Aid Device
A number of Nextel phones have been tested for hearing aid 
device compatibility. When some wireless phones are used 
with certain hearing devices (including hearing aids and 
cochlear implants), users may detect a noise which can 
interfere with the effectiveness of the hearing device.
Some hearing devices are more immune than others to this 
interference noise, and phones also vary in the amount of 
interference noise they may generate. ANSI standard C63.19 
was developed to provide a standardized means of measuring 
both wireless phone and hearing devices to determine usability 
rating categories for both.
Ratings have been developed for mobile phones to assist 
hearing device users find phones that may be compatible with 
their hearing device. Not all phones have been rated for 
compatibility with hearing devices. Phones that have been 
rated have a label with the rating(s) located on the box, and are 
listed at www.motorola.com/accessibility.
These ratings are not guarantees. Results will vary depending 
on the user’s hearing device and individual type and degree of 
hearing loss. If a hearing device is particularly vulnerable to 
interference noise; even a phone with a higher rating may still 
cause unacceptable noise levels in the hearing device. Trying 
Note
Never transport or store flammable gas, flammable liquids, 
or explosives in the compartment of your vehicle that 
contains your phone or accessories.