IF YOUR TELePHoN± G²tS
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¿À DÁy! and BÂ ÃuÄÅ ÆÇ
CÈÉcK ÊËÌ ÍÎÏ bÐÑÒÓÔÕ
Ö×MØÐÙÚmÛÜÝÞ ßàá âãäSå
Never pick up yoUr telephone set by
the crank Handle. It'll break.
A good habit to get into is to fold the
handle back into its slot ±s soon as you
have finished using it.
Left sticking out, the handle c²n
snag on any of a thousand things and
break off.
And, back off the ³-60 handset. It's
not a handle either. Sure, it fits in yoUr
telephone set snug, but it does not huG.
When you lift by the handset it PUts a
lot of strain on the retaining sprinGs
in the receiver cradle.
To avoid springing the springs, take
the
handset
out
of
the cradle
by
pushing it toward the spring anD then
lifting up on the cord end. RePlace
h´ndset by first holding the cord end
up µhile pUshing the other en¶ in
toward the sp·ing.
¸f You nee¶ to test the han¶set hol¶,
hold or stand the set ve·tically. If thE
handset stays in the c·a¶le, the sPrings
a·e OK. If the ³¹60 falls oUt, the
springs need to be adjustEd, reset or
·eplaced.
When yoU'·e not transmitting, steer
clear
of
that
ºR»SS¼TO½TA¾K
switch. Casual PUshing o· strapping
the switch can weaken yoUr BA¿30
batteries needlessly.
TO
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ēĔĕ
oN
Y±UR
ĖėĘę
f
·etractile cord has a lot of
snaP, bUt when it's oVerstretched it
gets snapless.
Too much st·etching
makes tHe cord fray and break at the