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16
Telephone Operation
Storing a Number in Memory
1. Lift the handset (if the TALK/BATT indi-
cator lights, press
TALK
to turn it off) and
press
MEM
. The TALK/BATT indicator
blinks.
2. Enter the number and any pause or tone
entries (see “Chain-Dialing Service
Numbers” and “Entering a Pause”).
Notes:
• The phone beeps 5 times and exits the
programming mode if you wait more
than 20 seconds between each key
press.
• Each tone or pause entry uses one digit
of memory.
• If you try to enter more than 16 digits,
the phone beeps 5 times and exits the
programming mode. Start over at Step 2
and enter no more than 16 digits in Step
3.
3. Press
MEM
again, then enter the memory
location number (
0
–
9
) where you want to
store the number.
The phone beeps once to indicate that the
number is stored.
To replace a stored number, simply store a
new number in its place. To clear a stored
number, lift the handset (if the TALK/BATT
indicator lights, press
TALK
to turn it off) and
press
MEM
twice. Then press the memory lo-
cation number (
0
–
9
) you want to clear. The
phone beeps once.
Entering a Pause
In some telephone systems, you must dial an
access code (9, for example) and wait for a
second dial tone before you can dial an out-
side number. You can store the access code
with the phone number. However, you must
also store a pause after the access code to
allow the outside line time to connect. To do
so, press
PAUSE
. Each press enters a 2-sec-
ond pause. For a longer pause, press
PAUSE
additional times.
Dialing a Memory Number
To dial a number stored in memory, lift the
handset or press
TALK
. The TALK/BATT in-
dicator lights. When you hear a dial tone,
simply press
MEM
and enter the memory lo-
cation number for the number you want to di-
al.
Or, to dial a number stored in the memory lo-
cation 1, 2, or 3, just press
M1
,
M2
, or
M3
.
You need not press
TALK
when you use
these buttons.
Note: If you select an empty memory loca-
tion, the phone beeps 5 times.
Chain-Dialing Service Numbers
For quick recall of numbers for special ser-
vices (such as alternate long distance or
bank by phone), store each group of num-
bers in its own memory location.
To use the stored special service informa-
tion, dial the service’s main number first.
Then, at the appropriate place in the call,
press
MEM
and enter the memory location
number (
0
–
9
) for the stored information.
Testing Stored Emergency Num-
bers
If you store an emergency service’s number
(police department, fire department, ambu-
lance) and you choose to test the stored
number, make the test call during the late
evening or early morning hours to avoid peak
demand periods. Also, remain on the line to
explain the reason for your call.
43-3806.fm Page 16 Tuesday, August 8, 2000 11:29 AM