Caution: Your wireless telephone gives you freedom and flexibility to stay
in touch while you move around. However, when using your phone
equipment, safety instructions should be followed to avoid the risks of fire,
electric shock, injury to person, and damage to property.
General Safety Instructions
1. When using your wireless phone, ensure your safety and the safety of
others:
a. Always watch where you are walking and standing.
b. Don’t let a phone call distract you from working safely.
2. In an emergency:
a. If an emergency occurs, dial the emergency phone number.
Remember: if you are in an area where your phone does not have a
clear signal from the base, it is highly probable that the call may not
go through. Locate the nearest landline telephone or other
communications device to call for help.
b. Emergency calls may not automatically provide emergency
personnel with your name, phone number or location.
3. Notice to Hearing Aid Users: This phone system is compatible with
inductively coupled hearing aids.
4. Notice to Cardiac Pacemaker Users: Preliminary studies done by the US
FDA and others have shown that, although interference to the implanted
cardiac pacemaker may occur when operating very closely, wireless
telephones “do not seem to pose a significant problem for pacemaker
wearers.” However, until more is known, FDA suggests that people with
pacemakers may want to take precautions when using or carrying a
wireless telephone to ensure that there is ample distance between the
telephone and the pacemaker. Do not carry the handset in a breast
pocket. If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking
place, turn off your handset immediately.
Product Safety Instructions
1. Read and understand all instructions.
2. Follow all warnings and instructions including those marked on the
product.
~5~
3. Changes or modifications to this product not expressively approved by
~6~
the manufacturer will void the warranty and the FCC authorization to
operate the equipment. Use only manufacturer provided accessories.
4. Do not use the telephone near water. Never spill liquid of any kind on
this product.
5. Unplug the product from the wall telephone jack and power outlet before
cleaning. Do not use liquid or aerosol cleaners. Use damp cloth for
cleaning.
6. Do not place this product on an unstable cart, stand, or table. The
product may fall and cause personal injury or damage to the product or
other property.
7. Power Outage: In the event of a power outage, your handset charger will
not recharge the handset battery, and the base station will not allow you
to make an outgoing call or take an incoming call. Both the charger and
the base station require electricity for operation. You should have a
telephone that does not require electricity available for use during power
outage, or have a temporary backup power supply.
8. Slots or openings in the product’s housing are provided for ventilation.
These openings must not be blocked or covered. Placing the product on
a bed, carpeting, or other similar surface may block these openings and
should be avoided. This product should never be placed near or over a
radiator or heat register, or in a built-in installation unless proper
ventilation is provided.
9. Never push objects of any kind into this product through housing
slots/openings as they may damage the product, touch dangerous
voltage points or short out parts that could result in fire, electric shock, or
injury.
10. This product should be operated only from the type of power source
indicated on the marking label. If you are not sure of the type of power
supply to your home, consult your dealer or local power company.
11. Do not overload wall power outlets and extension cords as this may
result in fire or electric shock.
12. To avoid electric shock or burn, do not disassemble this product. Send
this product to an authorized service center when service or repair work
is required. Call Customer Service for locations near you. Opening or
removing covers may expose you to dangerous voltages, electrical
currents or other risks. Incorrect reassembling of the product may cause
electric shock when the product is subsequently used.
13. Avoid using the product during a storm. There may be a risk of electric
shock from lightning.
14. Do not place the product where persons can step, trip, or fall on it.
15. Do not place conductive objects over or near the antenna.
16. Do not use the product to report a gas leak while in the vicinity of the
leak.
17. Do not install the base station or the handset charger near microwave
ovens, radios, TV sets, speakers, or other electrical equipment. These
appliances may cause interference to the product or experience
interference from the product.
18. Unplug the base station or the charger adaptor from the power outlet and
refer to an authorized service center under the following conditions:
a. If liquid had been spilled into the product.
b. When the power supply cord or plug is damaged or frayed.
c. If the product has been exposed to rain or water.
d. If the product does not operate normally by following the operating
instructions.
e. If the product has been dropped or housing has been damaged.
f. If the product shows a distinct change in performance.
Battery Safety Instructions
1. Use only manufacturer approved Li-ion rechargeable batteries and
charger. Do not use other types of rechargeable batteries or nonrechargeable batteries. The batteries could short-circuit, and the battery
enclosure may be damaged causing a hazardous condition.
2. Follow the charging instruction in this manual and instruction labels and
markings in the handset and charger compartments.
3. Battery must be recycled or disposed of properly. Do not dispose the
battery in a fire. The cells may explode.
4. Do not dispose of the battery in municipal waste. Check with local codes
for disposal instructions.
5. Exercise care in handling the batteries in order not to short-circuit the
battery with conductive materials such as rings, bracelets, keys,
pocketknife, and coins. The battery or conductive material may overheat
and cause burn or fire.
6. Do not expose batteries to rain or water.
7. Do not open or mutilate the battery. Released electrolyte is corrosive
and may cause injury to eyes or skin. The electrolyte may be toxic if
swallowed.
8. During charging, the battery heats up. This is normal and is not
dangerous.
~7~
Regulatory Information
~8~
FreeStyl 1
FCC ID:U2M-FS1
IC:3616C-FS1
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to
the following two conditions:
1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and
2)
this device must accept any interference received, including
interference that may cause undesired operation.
Base Station
Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a
Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits
are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful
interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates uses
and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in
accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to
radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference
will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause
harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be
determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged
to try to correct the interference by one of the following measures:
- Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
- Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
- Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to
which the receiver is connected.
- Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by
the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to
operate this equipment.
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject
to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful
interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received,
including interference that may cause undesired operation.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
FCC Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for
an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and
operated with minimum distance 20cm between the radiator & your body.
This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with
any other antenna or transmitter.
Industry Canada statement:
This device complies with RSS-210 of the Industry Canada Rules.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
(1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device
must accept any interference received, including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with IC radiation exposure limits set forth for an
uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and
operated with minimum distance 20cm between the radiator & your body.
This device has been designed to operate with an antenna having a
maximum gain of 2 dBi. Antenna having a higher gain is strictly
prohibited per regulations of Industry Canada. The required antenna
impedance is 50 ohms.
Protable Handset
Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a
Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits
are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful
interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses
and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in
accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to
radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference
will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause
harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be
determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged
to try to correct the interference by one of the following measures:
- Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
- Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
~9~
- Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to
~10~
which the receiver is connected.
- Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by
the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to
operate this equipment.
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject
to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful
interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received,
including interference that may cause undesired operation.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for
an uncontrolled environment. End users must follow the specific
operating instructions for satisfying RF exposure compliance. To
maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure compliance requirements,
please follow operation instruction as documented in this manual.
This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with
any other antenna or transmitter.
Industry Canada statement:
This device complies with RSS-210 of the Industry Canada Rules.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may
not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any
interference received, including interference that may cause undesired
operation.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with IC radiation exposure limits set forth for an
uncontrolled environment. End users must follow the specific operating
instructions for satisfying RF exposure compliance. To maintain
compliance with IC RF exposure compliance requirements, please follow
operation instruction as documented in this manual.
This device has been designed to operate with an antenna having a
maximum gain of 2.5dBi. Antenna having a higher gain is strictly
prohibited per regulations of Industry Canada. The required antenna
impedance is 50 ohms.
Equipment Checklist
1. In a Base + Handset package, please find the following components:
a. Base Station x 1
b. Base Antenna x 1
c. Base AC/DC Adaptor x 1
d. Handset x 1
e. Handset Antenna x 1
f. 1100mA Li-ion Battery Pack x 1
g. Telephone Cord x 1
h. User’s Manual, Quick Guide, and Warranty Card
2. In a Handset package, please find the following components:
a. Handset x 1
b. Handset Antenna x 1
c. 1100mA Li-ion Battery Pack x 1
d. Charger x 1
e. Charger AC/DC Adaptor x 1
f. Quick Guide, and Warranty Card
3. Optional Accessory
a. Spare Battery x 1700mA Li-ion
~11~
Handset Illustration
~12~
Handset Features
Basic Handset Features
1. 4-line LCD (Liquid Crystal Display)
a. The LCD display has LED (Light Emitting Diode) for backlighting.
b. The 1st line of LCD consists of icons.
c. Icons explanation from left to right
(1)
(2)
(3) Speech mode
(3.2) Headset mode (4) Sound and Indication
(5) Disable PA
(6)
(7)
d. The 2nd and 3rd lines of the LCD, maximum 16 characters each,
e The last line displays the left and right soft keys.
2. Ringer
a. Rings to an incoming call and intercom call.
b. Distinctive alert sounds indicating various events:
RSSI (Receive Signal Strength Indicator)
During a call, the number of bars is proportional
to the radio signal strength received.
Link mode
(2.1) Call in-progress (ON/OFF-Hook)
Indicates which the phone line of Base is active.
(2.2) Intercom in-progress
Indicates if Intercom mode is active
Indicate the Handset ID which is making intercom with.
(3.1) Speaker Indicator
Indicate if the speaker is active
(5) Periodic Long Series of beeps (repeat every 30 seconds): indicates
confirmation for saving success
Re: No any beep for invalid key entry
3.
TALK/FLASH ()
a. Places or answers a telephone or intercom call
b. Sends a Flash signal to phone line to retrieve a dial tone after the
call ends, or to perform the call waiting feature provided by local
phone companies during a call.
c. Press and hold the key for two seconds to enable/disable the
speakerphone.
4.
SPEAKERPHONE ()
a. Press the key to enable/disable the speakerphone during incoming,
outgoing or intercom call.
5.
2-WAY INTERCOM / TRANSFER ()
a. Places an intercom call to another handset, a group handset (group
paging) or all registered handsets.
b. Intercom calls are digital, full duplex, and are conducted without the
assistance from the base.
c.
6.
BROADCAST ()
a. Half duplex broadcasting to handsets for immediate announcement
b. Half duplex broadcasting to base stations
Re:Press the key on the side of handset to activate the broadcast
function.
7. Left/Right Soft Keys ()
a. Make menu selection.
8.
Up() /Down() Scrolling Keys
a. Scroll through records and menu selections.
b. Adjust receiver voice volume when in the Talk mode.
c.
d.
Press to adjust ringer volume when in the Standby mode.
Press to enter phonebook when in the Standby mode.
9.
END; On/Off Key ()
a.
Ends a call.
b. Leaves current menu operation, up one level.
c. Press for 3 seconds to off the power
10.
CALLER ID Key ()
a.
Review caller ID list.
b. Including received and missed caller ID.
Additional Handset Features
1. Multiple handsets registration
a.
b. ID 11-19: individual Handset IDs.
c. ID 91-99: Group IDs. Handsets can “subscribe” from the handset
2. Ringer Vibrator
a. For incoming call ringing & intercom ringing.
b. Six-level ringer volume selections (Off/Low/Medium/High/Vibrate/
b.
3. Caller ID
a. Displays incoming call phone number and name on the LCD (needs
4. Call waiting with caller ID
a. Displays 2nd incoming call information on the same phone line when
5. Name tagging with caller ID
a. Match the caller ID with the phone book entries; once matched, the
6. DND (Do Not Disturb, i.e., Silent Ring)
Up to 9 handsets can be registered to a base station
menu to group(s) and be paged when a landline caller or an
intercom caller enters a Group ID.
Vibrate & High)
Eight ringer type selections
Caller ID service from local telephone company)
1st call is in progress (needs Call Waiting with Caller ID service from
local telephone company)
LCD screen will display the name or nickname instead of pure caller
ID info (needs Call Waiting with Caller ID service from local
telephone company)
~15~
~16~
7. Call Logs
a. Redial: Stores 10 phone numbers (up to 26 digits each) dialed most
recently. Can perform last-number redial on all 10 numbers.
b. Received & New Call Log: Total 50 entries (16-digit phone number,
16-character names, and Date/Time stamp), needs Caller ID service
from local telephone company.
c. Phone numbers and names can be saved into phonebook while in
display.
8. Call barring
a. Block the users from dialing the long distance calls or international
calls
b. Up to 5 digits of each call barring setting; up to 5 entries allowed
c. If you need to dial a specific number to retrieve the dial tone, you
need to key in that number while setting the call barring
[Note] you need to key in the accurate user ID and password to perform
this feature. The default password is “0000”
9.
Any Key Answer (except and SILENT Soft Key)
10. Key-guard
a. When the keyguard is selected, all keys will be locked.
Press UNLOCK (Left) soft key followed by “*” to release it.
11. Dialing Prefix
a. Up to 14 digits, including pause(s), one access code can be pre-
programmed to be added automatically in front of the dialed number
when dialing from call logs, phonebook, and dial-and-send dialing.
12. Call Hold
a. Places call on hold
b. Battery Hot Swap: Change battery while call is on hold.
13. Mute
a. Press MUTE (Left) soft key during talk, the handset microphone will
be muted.
Press UNMUTE (Left) soft key to release it.
14. Phonebook
a. 50 entries, each stores a phone number or handset ID (up to 26
digits) and name (up to16 characters)
b. Alphabetically sorted display and search
c. Dial from display
d. During the stand-by mode, you can enter the phone book by
pressing scrolling key
15. Key tone
a. Four-level key tone volume selections (Off/Low/Medium/High)
b. Four key tone type selections
16. Call Timers
a. Display call time duration for current call during and immediately
after the call
17. Programmable Feature Call
a. Allow user to pre-program the most frequently used Feature code
into FreeStyl 1 which is adjunct to the PBX system.
b. Up to 10 entries can be saved.
c. Once the feature code being programmed, you can quick perform
those functions during the call by pressing OPTION soft key.
18. PA On/Off
a. Enable or disable the broadcast function.
b. When PA is Off, the handset can’t receive broadcast from base or
other registered handsets; But it can broadcast to base or other
registered handsets.
19. Menu Display
a. To avoid mis-setup in the “Call Settings”(MENU-4), “Phone Settings”
(MENU-5) and “Base Settings” (MENU-6), these settings can be
hidden.
b. Password is required before enter Menu Display (MENU-8), the
default password is “0000”.
c. When enable the settings, these setting will not displayed any
longer, unless disable them by entering Menu Display again.
20. Group Setting
a. Allow handset to subscribe to one or several groups.
Re: Up to 9 groups can be subscribed.
21. Custom Name
a. Allow changing the “Welcome” screen to the desired wording or info,
such as the user’s name.
Re: Up to 32 characters can be entered.
~17~
~18~
22. Change Pwd
a. Allow changing the handset password which requires to enter in Call
Barring (MENU-4-4) and Menu Display (MENU-8) .
Re:Default is “0000”.
23. Change PIN
a. Allow changing the Base PIN which requires to enter in Base
Settings (MENU-6).
Re: Default is “0000”.
24. DTMF Duration
a. From MENU-6-1 to select variable duration of DTMF tone.
b. Default is 100ms.
c. When entering the base setting, PIN is required. Default is “0000”.
Re: Better to check with your phone company first before changing it.
25. Programmable Flash key timing
a. From MENU-6-2 to select flash key timing
b. 9-level (100 ms - 900 ms) timing selections, default= 600 ms.
c. The default value (600 ms) works in most areas. Changing this
setting may cause Flash key not working. Change only when you
are certain of the new value would work.
d. When entering the base setting, PIN is required. Default is “0000”.
26. Assign handset ID for new handset
a. Using registered handset from MENU-6-3 to assign a handset ID to
a new handset.
b. If not assign handset ID, the system will automatically assign a
handset ID to a new handset..
c. When entering the base setting, PIN is required. Default is “0000”.
27. Clear Handset
a. Using registered handset from MENU-6-4 to remove the other
registered handset, in case the other registered handset is defected.
b. Once clear the other registered handset, the user is able to register a
new handset for instead.
c. When entering the base setting, PIN is required. Default is “0000”.
28. Change PIN
Allow changing the base PIN which requires to enter the “Base Settings”
(MENU-6-5).
a. Using registered handset to change PIN from MENU-6-5.
b. Default PIN is “0000”.
c. When entering the base setting, PIN is required. Default is “0000”.
29. Auto Hand Up feature
a. Using registered handset from MENU-6-6 to turn on/off the Auto
hand up feature.
b. If turning on the feature, the handset will automatically hang up the
call when the far-end hangs up the call.
c. When entering the base setting, PIN is required. Default is “0000”.
30. Set Time
The set time function allows user to set date/time to support the DTMF
caller ID (DTMF caller ID doesn’t attach date/time when receiving from
PSTN, using this setting, user is able to review the date/time when the
caller ID received).
a. Enter MENU-6 to set Base Settings.
b.
c. Enter Base PIN (Default is “0000”).
d. Enter “7” to enter Set Time.
e. Enter 4 digits for MM/DD(Month/Day), then enter 4 digits for hr:mm
f. Press SAVE (left soft key) to finish the setting.
Press or scrolling key to select desired base.
(Hour:Minute)
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