![Palm Treo 650 User Manual Download Page 334](http://html1.mh-extra.com/html/palm/treo-650/treo-650_user-manual_748199334.webp)
322
Section 5A: Safety
How does FCC Audit Cell Phone RF?
After FCC grants permission for a particular cellular telephone to be marketed, FCC will
occasionally conduct “post-grant” testing to determine whether production versions of the
phone are being produced to conform with FCC regulatory requirements. The manufacturer
of a cell phone that does not meet FCC's regulatory requirements may be required to remove
the cell phone from use and to refund the purchase price or provide a replacement phone,
and may be subject to civil or criminal penalties. In addition, if the cell phone presents a risk
of injury to the user, FDA may also take regulatory action. The most important post-grant
test, from a consumer's perspective, is testing of the RF emissions of the phone. FCC
measures the Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of the phone, following a very rigorous testing
protocol. As is true for nearly any scientific measurement, there is a possibility that the test
measurement may be less than or greater than the actual RF emitted by the phone. This
difference between the RF test measurement and actual RF emission is because test
measurements are limited by instrument accuracy, because test measurement and actual
use environments are different, and other variable factors. This inherent variability is known
as “measurement uncertainty.” When FCC conducts post-grant testing of a cell phone, FCC
takes into account any measurement uncertainty to when determining whether regulatory
action is appropriate. This approach ensures that when FCC takes regulatory action, it will
have a sound, defensible scientific basis.
FDA scientific staff reviewed the methodology used by FCC to measure cell phone RF, and
agreed it is an acceptable approach, given our current understanding of the risks presented
by cellular phone RF emissions. RF emissions from cellular phones have not been shown to
present a risk of injury to the user when the measured SAR is less than the safety limits set
by FCC (an SAR of 1.6 w/kg). Even in a case where the maximum measurement uncertainty
permitted by current measurement standards was added to the maximum permissible SAR,
the resulting SAR value would be well below any level known to produce an acute effect.
Consequently, FCC's approach with measurement uncertainty will not result in consumers
being exposed to any known risk from the RF emitted by cellular telephones.
FDA will continue to monitor studies and literature reports concerning acute effects of cell
phone RF, and concerning chronic effects of long-term exposure to cellular telephone RF
Summary of Contents for Treo 650
Page 2: ......
Page 13: ...Section 1 Getting Started ...
Page 14: ...2 ...
Page 22: ...10 Section 1A Setting Up Software ...
Page 30: ...18 Section 1B Setting Up Service ...
Page 37: ...Section 1C Connecting to Your Computer 25 Computer Connection HotSync Button ...
Page 38: ...26 Section 1C Connecting to Your Computer ...
Page 39: ...Section 2 Your Sprint PCS Vision Smart Device ...
Page 40: ...28 ...
Page 62: ...50 Section 2A Learning the Basics ...
Page 179: ...Section 3 Sprint PCS Service Features ...
Page 180: ...168 ...
Page 190: ...178 Section 3A Sprint PCS Service Features The Basics ...
Page 218: ...206 Section 3C Sending and Receiving Email ...
Page 232: ...220 Section 3D Messaging ...
Page 244: ...232 Section 3E Browsing the Web ...
Page 259: ...Section 4 Help ...
Page 260: ...248 ...
Page 303: ...Section 5 Safety and Terms and Conditions ...
Page 304: ...292 ...
Page 340: ...328 Section 5A Safety ...
Page 388: ...376 Index ...