LG LGD801 Owner's Manual

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For Your Safety
rated have the rating on their box or a label located on the box.
The ratings are not guarantees.
Results will vary depending on the user’s hearing device and hearing loss. If 
your hearing device happens to be vulnerable to interference, you may not be 
able to use a rated phone successfully.
Trying out the phone with your hearing device is the best way to evaluate it for 
your personal needs.
M-Ratings: Phones rated M3 or M4 meet FCC requirements and are likely to 
generate less interference to hearing devices than phones that are not labeled. 
M4 is the better/higher of the two ratings.
T-Ratings: Phones rated T3 or T4 meet FCC requirements and are likely to 
generate less interference to hearing devices than phones that are not labeled. 
T4 is the better/higher of the two ratings.
Hearing devices may also be rated. Your hearing device manufacturer or 
hearing health professional may help you find this rating. Higher ratings mean 
that the hearing device is relatively immune to interference noise. The hearing 
aid and wireless phone rating values are then added together. A sum of 5 is 
considered acceptable for normal use.
A sum of 6 is considered for best use.
In the above example, if a hearing aid meets the M2 level rating and the 
wireless phone meets the M3 level rating, the sum of the two values equal M5. 
This should provide the hearing aid user with “normal usage” while using their 
hearing aid with the particular wireless phone. “Normal usage” in this context is 
defined as a signal quality that’s acceptable for normal operation.
The M mark is intended to be synonymous with the U mark. The T mark is 
intended to be synonymous with the UT mark.
The M and T marks are recommended by the Alliance for Telecommunications