Important Safety Information - Klipsch Reference On-Ear II Manual De Instrucciones

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IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION

1. READ these instructions.
2. KEEP these instructions.
3. HEED all warnings.
4. FOLLOW all these instructions.
5. DO NOT use this apparatus near water or moisture.
6. If you hear ringing or experience pain or discomfort
in your ears during or after using any in-ear audio
product, that is a sign you are listening too loud.
When your ears are exposed to high volumes (in
excess of 85dB) for over an hour, you may be
permanently damaging your hearing.
7. Turn down your listening device's volume to zero
before you insert the Klipsch headphones and turn
on the device. Once you have the headphones on,
gradually increase the volume to a comfortable,
moderate volume.
8. Do not install near any heat sources such as
radiators, heat registers, stoves, or other apparatus
(including amplifiers) that produce heat.
9. ONLY USE attachments/accessories specified by
the manufacturer.
10. REFER all servicing to qualified service personnel.
Servicing is required when the apparatus has been
damaged in any way, such as power-supply cord or
plug is damaged, liquid has been spilled or objects
have fallen into the apparatus, the apparatus has
been exposed to rain or moisture, does not operate
normally, or has been dropped
11. NEVER operate a motor vehicle while listening to or
wearing your headphones. Not only dangerous, it is
illegal in many places.
12. NEVER operate heavy machinery while listening to
or wearing your headphones.
13. We don't recommend you use the headphones
while riding a bicycle, running,or walking in
heavy traffic areas.
WARNING:
Except in case of emergency, Klipsch recommends you
do not use these headphones or headsets (headphones
plus microphone) as aviation communication equipment
as they are not engineered for many environmental
conditions common in commercial or non-commercial
aircraft (including, but not limited to: altitude,
temperature, noise conditions, unpressurized aircraft,
etc.) resulting in possible interference to critical
communications.
The Occupational Safety Health Administration (OSHA)
has issued headphone usage recommendations for
maximum daily exposure and sound pressure levels
(measured in decibels (dB)). A decibel is a unit of
measure of sound, and decibels increase exponentially
as sound gets louder. For example, conversational
speech is typically around 60dB, and a rock concert in
a stadium is often about 110dB.
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