Radio frequency exposure – Socket Mobile BluetoothTM Connection Kit User Manual

Page 49

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APPENDIX B: SAFETY AND USAGE TIPS | 49

Radio Frequency Exposure

Your Bluetooth Card is a radio transmitter and receiver. When in operation,
it communicates with a Bluetooth-equipped mobile phone or mobile
computer by receiving and transmitting radio frequency (RF) magnetic
fields in the frequency range 2400 to 2500 MHz. The output power of the
radio transmitter is 0.001 Watt.

The Bluetooth Card unit is designed to be in compliance with the RF
exposure limits set by national authorities and international health agencies

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when installed or used separately from other antennas or radio transmitters.

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Examples of RF exposure standards and guidelines:


ICNIRP, “Guidelines for limiting exposure to time-varying electric, magnetic, and
electromagnetic fields (up to 300 GHz)”, International Commission on Non-Ionizing
Radiation Protection (ICNIRP), Health Physics, vol. 74, pp 494-533, April 1998.

99/519/EC, EU Council Recommendation on the limitation of exposure to the
general public to electromagnetic fields 0 Hz – 300 GHz, Official Journal of the
European Communities, July 12, 1999.

ANSI/IEEE C95.1-1992, “Safety levels with respect to human exposure to radio
frequency electromagnetic fields, 3 kHz to 300 GHz”, The Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, Inc., New York, 1991.

FCC Report and Order, ET Docket 93-62, FCC 96-326, Federal Communications
Commission (FCC), August 1996.

Radiocommunications (Electromagnetic Radiation Human Exposure) Standard
1999, Australian Communications Authority (ACA), May 1999.

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