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©2006. 

RadioShack

 Corporation. 

All rights reserved. 

RadioShack

 and 

RadioShack.com

 are trademarks 

used by 

RadioShack

 Corporation.

43-3911

10A06 

Printed in China 

When using your telephone equipment, basic safety 

precautions should always be followed to reduce 

the risk of fire, electric shock, and injury to persons, 

including the following:

• Do not use this product near water, for example, 

near a bathtub, washbowl, kitchen sink or laundry 

tub, in a wet basement or near a swimming pool.

• Avoid using a telephone (other than a cordless 

type) during an electrical storm. There may be a 

remote risk of electric shock from lightning.

• Do not use the telephone to report a gas leak in the 

vicinity of the leak.

• Use only the batteries indicated in this manual. Do 

not dispose of batteries in a fire. They may explode. 

Check with local codes for possible special disposal 

instructions.

important safety instructions

Your phone complies with Part 68 of 

FCC Rules

. You must, upon 

receipt, provide the FCC registration number and the REN to your 

telephone company. Both numbers are on the bottom of the phone.
Note: You must not connect your phone to:

•  coin-operated systems
•  most electronic key telephone systems
•  party-line systems

Connection to party line service is subject to state tariffs. Contact 

the state public utility commission, public service commission, or 

corporation commission for information.
We have designed your phone to conform to federal regulations, 

and you can connect it to most telephone lines. However, each 

phone (and each device, such as a telephone or answering machine) 

that you connect to the telephone line draws power from the 

telephone line. We refer to this power draw as the device’s ringer 

equivalence number, or REN on the bottom of your phone.
If you use more than one phone or other device on the line, add up 

all of the RENs. If the total is more than five (three in rural areas), 

your telephones might not ring. If ringer operation is impaired, 

remove a device from the line. 
In the unlikely event that your phone causes problems on the phone 

line, the phone company can temporarily discontinue your service. 

If this happens, the phone company attempts to notify you as soon 

as possible and advises you of your right to file a complaint with the 

FCC.
Also, the phone company can make changes to its lines, equipment, 

operations, or procedures that could affect the operation of this 

telephone. The telephone company notifies you of these changes in 

advance, so you can take the necessary steps to prevent interruption 

of your telephone service.

surge protection

Your telephone has built-in protection circuits to reduce the risk of 

damage from surges in telephone line and power line current. These 

protection circuits meet or exceed the FCC requirements. However, 

lightning striking the telephone or power lines can damage your 

telephone.
Lightning damage is not common. Nevertheless, if you live in an 

area that has severe electrical storms, we suggest that you unplug 

your phone when storms approach to reduce the possibility of 

damage.

FCC statement

This product is warranted by 

RadioShack

 against manufacturing defects in material 

and workmanship under normal use for one (1) year from the date of purchase from 

RadioShack

 company-owned stores and authorized 

RadioShack

 franchisees 

and dealers. For complete warranty details and exclusions, check with your local 

RadioShack

 store.

RadioShack

 Customer Relations

300 RadioShack Circle, Fort Worth, TX 76102    

04/04

limited one-year warranty

• Keep your phone dry; if it gets wet, wipe it dry 

immediately.

• Use and store your phone only in room 

temperature environments. Handle your phone 

carefully; do not drop it.

• Keep your phone away from dust and dirt, and 

wipe it with a damp cloth occasionally to keep it 

looking new.

• Modifying or tampering with your phone’s 

internal components can cause a malfunction 

and might invalidate its warranty. If your phone is 

not performing as it should, take it to your local 

RadioShack

 store for assistance.

care and service

You can store up to 20 of your most frequently dialed 

phone numbers, and dial the number by using one of 

your memory locations (M1-M10 or 0-9).

storing numbers in memory locations

1.  Press 

STORE

2.  Enter the phone number you want to store, including 

1+ area code for long distance numbers.

3.  Press any of the 

M1-M10 memory buttons. To store 

the number to an indirect memory location, press 

MEM and then press any key between 0 and 9.

4.  Use the supplied index cards to record stored 

numbers.

•  You can store up to 16 digits for each number.
•  If you make a mistake while entering the number, 

press 

STORE

 twice, and then re-enter the phone 

number.

•  To change a number in memory, store a new one 

in its place.

entering a pause in a memory number

In some telephone systems, you must dial an access 

code (9, for example), wait for the second dial tone, and 

then dial the number.

Press 

OPT/P to enter a three-second pause. For a long 

pause, press OPT/P again. Each time you do this, one 

digit of memory is being saved.

Note

: For more information about 

OPT

/

P

, refer to the section 

“using 

OPT

/

P

.”

dialing a memory number

Press the desired location number (

M1-M10). To dial a 

number stored in the indirect memory location, press 

MEM and the location number (0-9).

chain dialing

You can make a call using more than one of the phone’s 

memory locations. Chain dialing is useful for dialing 

special services, such as alternate long distance or 

bank-by-phone.

testing stored emergency numbers

If you want to test a stored emergency number (police 

department, fire department, ambulance), make the 

test call during the late evening or early morning hours 

to avoid peak demand periods. Remain on the line to 

explain the reason for your call.

memory dialing

NOTES

If you subscribe to Caller ID service, the phone 

company sends information about the call between the 

first and second rings of every call you receive. The 

phone can also show the name of the caller if you have 

that service.

If the Caller...

Display Reads

Left a message

MSG

Called more than once

REPEAT

Blocks their number or name

PRIVATE

Is not within a Caller ID area

OUT OF AREA

Is calling long distance

LONG DISTANCE

Note

: If the Caller ID record is garbled,

 ��NE ERROR

��NE ERROR

 appears.

reviewing caller ID records

Each time you receive a call, your phone stores a Caller 

ID record that you can review later. The record includes 

the following:
•  Call number (1, 2, 3, etc.) 
•  Caller’s phone number
•  Time and date of the call 
•  Caller’s name (if you have this service)
Repeatedly press REVIEW 

 

or 

 to see Caller ID 

records. -END OF LIST-

END OF LIST--

 appears after the first or last 

Caller ID record as you scroll through the list.

•  Your display can show up to 11 digits of a phone 

number. If the number is longer, the display 

shows only the last 11 digits.

•  The phone returns to the time/date display after 

about 20 seconds, if you do not press a key.

deleting caller ID records

You can delete individual Caller ID records, or delete all 

of them after you review them. You cannot delete Caller 

ID records that have not been reviewed or during a call.
•  To remove a single Caller ID record, press DELETE 

twice.

•  To remove multiple records, hold down DELETE until 

DELETE ALL? appears. Then, press DELETE once. 

No CALLS appears in the display.

•  If you have unread records while holding DELETExx 

NEW CALLS and PLEASE READ display alternately. 

Review the records first before deletion.

using OPT/P

Your phone provides dialing options for different 

phone systems, allow you to select the correct dialing 

selection for a phone number before you press 

CALLBACK
1.  Repeatedly press REVIEW 

 

or 

 

to find the 

desired phone number. 

2.  Repeatedly press OPT/P to select the desired dialing 

option. You can select one of the following:

•  seven-digit number
•  10-digit number (area code + number)
•  11-digit number (1+ area code + number)

using callback

Press 

CALLBACK to automatically dial the number 

displayed in the Caller ID display.

caller ID operation

NOTES

No dial tone — Be sure the handset and phone line 

cords are securely connected.
Display is blank — Be sure batteries are correctly 

installed.
Volume drops or sound is distorted — Be sure any

— Be sure any 

other phones are not being used.
Call is noisy — Check to see if the cords are securely 

connected.
Can receive calls, but cannot make calls — Set

— Set MODE 

to the correct dialing mode, P or T.
No Caller ID information appears — You have not 

subscribed to Caller ID service with your phone 

company.

troubleshooting

Switch MODE T/P/TB to T or P to match the type of 

service you have. If you are not sure which service 

you have, do this simple test.

1.  Set MODE to T.
2.  Lift the handset to press SPEAKER and listen for the 

dial tone.

3.  Press any number other than 0.

• If your dial tone stops, you have touch-tone service. 

Leave MODE to T.

• If the dial tone continues, you have pulse service. 

Set MODE to P.

NOTE

: TB is designated for use in the UK.

using tone services on a pulse line

I

f you have a pulse line, you might need to use tone 

service for special services, such as bank-by-phone. To 

use tone service, do the following:

1.  Be sure MODE is set to P and dial the number.
2.  When the system answers, press 

. Any additional 

numbers you press will send a tone signal.

After you hang up, your phone automatically resets to 

pulse dialing.

setting the dialing mode

43-3911 rscn.indd   2

10/12/2006   11:30:02

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