Radio Shack 43-3908 User Manual

Page 9

Advertising
background image

Oper

atio

n

9

S

TORING

A

N

UMBER

IN

M

EMORY

1. Lift the handset.
2. Press

MEMORY

. TALK/BATT blinks.

3. Enter the number and any tone and pause entries (see

“Using Tone Services on a Pulse Line” on Page 8 and
“Entering a Pause” on Page 9). Ô

4. Press

MEMORY

again, then enter the memory location

number (

0

9

) where you want to store the number. A

tone sounds to indicate that the number is stored.

To replace a stored number, simply store a new one in its
place. Or, lift the handset and press

MEMORY

twice. Then

press the memory location number (

0

9

) you want to clear.

A tone sounds.

E

NTERING

A

P

AUSE

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 outside number. You can store the access code
with the phone number. However, you should also store a
pause after the access code to allow the outside line time to
connect. To enter a 2-second pause, press

REDIAL/PAUSE

.

You can add more pause entries for a longer pause.

D

IALING

A

M

EMORY

N

UMBER

To dial a number stored in memory, lift the handset and
press

TALK

. TALK/BATT lights. When you hear a dial tone,

press

MEMORY

and enter the memory location number for

the number you want to dial.
To dial a number stored in memory location 1, press

SPEED

DIAL

. You do not have to press

TALK

when you press

SPEED DIAL

. Ô

C

HAIN

-D

IALING

S

ERVICE

N

UMBERS

For quick recall of numbers for special services (such as
bank-by-phone), store each group of numbers in its own
memory location.
Dial the service’s main number first. Then, when prompted
to enter the number, press

MEMORY

and enter the number

for the location where the additional information is stored.

T

ESTING

S

TORED

E

MERGENCY

N

UMBERS

If you store an emergency service’s number (police
department, fire department, ambulance) 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.

Ô

NOTE

Ô

Storing a Number in Memory

• An error tone sounds and the

phone exits the programming
mode if you wait more than 30
seconds between keypresses.

• 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.

Dialing a Memory Number

If you select an empty memory
location, the phone beeps 5 times.

43-3908.fm Page 9 Thursday, December 19, 2002 3:12 PM

Advertising