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User Manual Body Worn Camera | Users Manual | 1.57 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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User Manual Safety | Users Manual | 2.67 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Internal Photos | Internal Photos | 1.45 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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External Photos | External Photos | 792.35 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Label | ID Label/Location Info | 165.43 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Attestation Bands Declaration (Module) | Attestation Statements | 110.00 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Attestation Statements Part 2.911(d)(7) | Attestation Statements | 445.70 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Attstn Stmt Part 2.911(d)(5)(i)&(ii) | Attestation Statements | 462.50 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Authorization Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 106.76 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Block Diagram | Block Diagram | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
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Confidentiality Request Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 98.02 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Cover Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 467.54 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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LTE BT WLAN GNSS Antenna Report | Test Report | 2.55 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Moto Sol Third-party Murata Conf. Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 454.12 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Moto Sol Third-party Sierra Wireless Conf. Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 454.06 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Murata Block Diagram | Block Diagram | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
1 2 3 | Murata Operational Description | Operational Description | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
1 2 3 | Murata Schematics | Schematics | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
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Murata Third-party confidential letter | Cover Letter(s) | 156.71 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Operational Description | Operational Description | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
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Power of Attorney Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 60.31 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Parts List Tune Up Procedure | Parts List/Tune Up Info | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
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SAR Report | RF Exposure Info | 2.01 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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SAR Report Appendix A | RF Exposure Info | 461.34 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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SAR Report Appendix B | RF Exposure Info | 668.81 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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SAR Report Appendix C Part 1 | RF Exposure Info | 3.89 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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SAR Report Appendix C Part 2 | RF Exposure Info | 4.21 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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SAR Report Appendix D | RF Exposure Info | 495.25 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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SAR Report Appendix E | RF Exposure Info | 55.46 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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SAR Report Appendix G | RF Exposure Info | 5.73 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Schematics | Schematics | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Block Diagram | Block Diagram | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
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Sierra Wireless Module Report Part 90 | Test Report | 3.81 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 1 | Test Report | 4.63 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 10 | Test Report | 4.06 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 11 | Test Report | 4.32 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 12 | Test Report | 4.18 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 13 | Test Report | 4.81 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 14 | Test Report | 3.76 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 15 | Test Report | 2.10 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 2 | Test Report | 4.85 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 3 | Test Report | 2.69 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 4 | Test Report | 2.95 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 5 | Test Report | 4.15 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 6 | Test Report | 4.81 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 7 | Test Report | 2.63 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 8 | Test Report | 3.31 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 9 | Test Report | 3.97 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Sierra Wireless Module Tsup Parts22-24-27 | Test Setup Photos | 409.93 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Operational Description | Operational Description | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Schematics | Schematics | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
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Sierra Wireless Third-party Conf Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 517.87 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Statement of Certitfication | Cover Letter(s) | 119.54 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report LTE Part 1 | Test Report | 4.67 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report LTE Part 2 | Test Report | 4.27 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report LTE Part 3 | Test Report | 1.38 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Setup Photos LTE | Test Setup Photos | 4.27 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Setup Photos SAR Appendix F | Test Setup Photos | 629.36 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Attestation BT WLAN Declaration | Attestation Statements | 120.98 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Test Report | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | ||||||
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Test Report BT Part 1 | Test Report | 4.42 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report BT Part 2 | Test Report | 4.66 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Setup Photos BT | Test Setup Photos | 892.95 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
1 2 3 | Parts List & Tune-up | Parts List/Tune Up Info | June 29 2023 | confidential | ||||
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Test Report BTLE | Test Report | 4.10 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report WiFi 2.4G Part 1 | Test Report | 4.43 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report WiFi 2.4G Part 2 | Test Report | 5.23 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report WiFi 2.4G Part 3 | Test Report | 2.39 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Report WiFi 2.4G Part 4 | Test Report | 4.41 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Setup Photos BTLE | Test Setup Photos | 892.68 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 | |||
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Test Setup Photos WiFi 2.4G | Test Setup Photos | 885.09 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | User Manual Body Worn Camera | Users Manual | 1.57 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
V700 Body-Worn Camera User Guide JUNE 2023 2023 Motorola Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved
* MN009878A01*
MN009878A01-B MN009878A01-B Intellectual Property and Regulatory Notices Intellectual Property and Regulatory Notices Copyrights The Motorola Solutions products described in this document may include copyrighted Motorola Solutions computer programs. Laws in the United States and other countries preserve for Motorola Solutions certain exclusive rights for copyrighted computer programs. Accordingly, any copyrighted Motorola Solutions computer programs contained in the Motorola Solutions products described in this document may not be copied or reproduced in any manner without the express written permission of Motorola Solutions. No part of this document may be reproduced, transmitted, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language or computer language, in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of Motorola Solutions, Inc. Trademarks MOTOROLA, MOTO, MOTOROLA SOLUTIONS, and the Stylized M Logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Motorola Trademark Holdings, LLC and are used under license. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. WATCHGUARD and Evidence Library are trademarks or registered trademarks of WatchGuard Video, Inc. License Rights The purchase of Motorola Solutions products shall not be deemed to grant either directly or by implication, estoppel or otherwise, any license under the copyrights, patents or patent applications of Motorola Solutions, except for the normal non-exclusive, royalty-free license to use that arises by operation of law in the sale of a product. Open Source Content This product may contain Open Source software used under license. Open Source licenses, legal notices, attribution, and corresponding open source software are available upon request. European Union (EU) and United Kingdom (UK) Waste of Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive The European Union's WEEE directive and the UK's WEEE regulation require that products sold into EU countries and the UK must have the crossed-out wheelie bin label on the product (or the package in some cases). As defined by the WEEE directive, this crossed-out wheelie bin label means that customers and end-users in EU and UK countries should not dispose of electronic and electrical equipment or accessories in household waste. Customers or end-users in EU and UK countries should contact their local equipment supplier representative or service centre for information about the waste collection system in their country. Disclaimer Please note that certain features, facilities, and capabilities described in this document may not be applicable to or licensed for use on a specific system, or may be dependent upon the characteristics of 2 MN009878A01-B Intellectual Property and Regulatory Notices a specific mobile subscriber unit or configuration of certain parameters. Please refer to your Motorola Solutions contact for further information. 2023 Motorola Solutions, Inc. All Rights Reserved 3 MN009878A01-B Contact Us Contact Us The Centralized Managed Support Operations (CMSO) is the primary contact for technical support included in your organization's service agreement with Motorola Solutions. Service agreement customers should be sure to call the CMSO in all situations listed under Customer Responsibilities in their agreement, such as:
To confirm troubleshooting results and analysis before taking action Your organization received support phone numbers and other contact information appropriate for your geographic region and service agreement. Use that contact information for the most efficient response. However, if needed, you can also find general support contact information on the Motorola Solutions website, by following these steps:
1 Enter motorolasolutions.com in your browser. 2 Ensure that your organization's country or region is displayed on the page. Clicking or tapping the name of the region provides a way to change it. 3 Select "Support" on the motorolasolutions.com page. Comments Send questions and comments regarding user documentation to documentation@motorolasolutions.com. Provide the following information when reporting a documentation error:
The document title and part number The page number or title of the section with the error A description of the error Motorola Solutions offers various courses designed to assist in learning about the system. For information, go to https://learning.motorolasolutions.com to view the current course offerings and technology paths. 4 Document History Version Description MN009878A01-002 V700 1.0.1 release MN009878A01-001 Initial 1.0.0 release (GA) MN009878A01-000 Initial beta release MN009878A01-B Document History Date May 2023 May 2023 February 2023 5 MN009878A01-B FCC and IC Notices FCC and IC Notices FCC and IC Notices This equipment complies with Part 15 of the FCC rules and Industry Canada license-exempt RSS standards. This equipment should only be used with the antenna supplied by Motorola Solutions. Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the manufacturer could void the user's authority
. to operate the equipment Motorola Solutions V700 is assigned the following IDs FCC ID AZ499FT7164 IC 109U-99FT7164 Motorola Solutions WiFi base contains the following IDs:
FCC ID YJV-VST500 The device complies with Part 15 of the FCC rules and Industry Canada license-exempt RSS standards subject to the following two conditions:
1 The device may not cause harmful interference. 2 The device must accept all interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Under Industry Canada regulations, this radio transmitter may only operate using an antenna of a type and maximum (or lesser) gain approved for the transmitter by Industry Canada. To reduce potential radio interference to other users, the antenna type and its gain should be so chosen that the equivalent isotropically radiated power (e.i.r.p.) is not more than that necessary for successful communication. Avertissements de la FCC et IC Cet appareil est conforme la Partie 15 des rglements de la FCC et Industrie Canada exempts de licence standard RSS. Cet appareil doit tre utilis uniquement avec l'antenne fournie par Motorola Solutions, Inc. Tout changement ou modification non expressment approuve par le fabricant pourrait
. annuler l'autorit de l'utilisateur de faire fonctionner l'appareil Motorola Solutions V700 se voit attribuer les identifiants suivants FCC ID AZ499FT7164 Motorola Solutions WiFi base contient les identifiants suivants:
FCC ID YJV-VST500 Cet appareil est conforme la Partie 15 des rglements de la FCC et Industrie Canada exempts de licence standard RSS soumis aux deux conditions suivantes:
1 Cet appareil ne peut causer des interfrences nuisibles. 2 Cet appareil doit accepter toutes les interfrences reues, y compris les interfrences qui peuvent perturber le fonctionnement. Conformment la rglementation d'Industrie Canada, cet metteur radio ne peut fonctionner l'aide d'une antenne d'un type et maximum (ou moins) Gain approuv pour l'metteur par Industrie Canada. Pour rduire le risque d'interfrence avec d'autres utilisateurs, le type d'antenne et son gain doivent tre choisis afin que la puissance isotrope rayonne quivalente (PIRE) ne dpasse pas ce qui est ncessaire pour une communication russie. 6 MN009878A01-B Supplier's Declaration of Conformity Supplier's Declaration of Conformity Declaration of Conformity Per FCC CRF 47 Part 2 Section 2.1077(a) Responsibility Party Name: Motorola Solutions, Inc. Address: 2000 Progress Pkwy, Schaumburg IL, 60196 Phone Number: 1-800-927-2744 Hereby declares that the product V700 conforms to the following regulations:
FCC Part 15, subpart B, section 15.107(a), 15.107(d), and section 15.09(a) 7 MN009878A01-B Class B Digital Device Class B Digital Device As a personal computer peripheral, this device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
This device may not cause harmful interference, and This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation NOTE: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help NOTE: Transfer Station II has been tested and found to comply with the limits for Class A digital device, pursuant part 15 of the FCC. 8 MN009878A01-B Important Safety Information Important Safety Information RF Energy Exposure Training and Product Safety Information for Mission Critical Devices. NOTICE: ATTENTION! This mission critical device is restricted to Occupational use only. Before using the mission critical device, read the RF Energy Exposure Training and Product Safety Information for Mission Critical Devices manual which contains important operating instructions for safe usage and RF energy awareness and control for Compliance with applicable standards and Regulations. This equipment is designed and manufactured not to exceed the emission limits for exposure to radio frequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications Commission of the U.S. Government. For body worn operation, this device has been tested and meets the FCC RF exposure guideline for use with a Motorola Solutions, Inc. approved accessories sold with this device. 9 MN009878A01-B Contents Contents Intellectual Property and Regulatory Notices.......................................................... 2 Contact Us................................................................................................................... 4 Document History....................................................................................................... 5 FCC and IC Notices.....................................................................................................6 Supplier's Declaration of Conformity .......................................................................7 Class B Digital Device................................................................................................ 8 Important Safety Information..................................................................................... 9 List of Figures............................................................................................................14 List of Tables............................................................................................................. 15 Chapter 1: Introduction...........................................................................................16 1.1 About the V700 Body-Worn Camera..................................................................................... 16 1.2 Related Documents and Information..................................................................................... 17 1.3 Prerequisites and Requirements........................................................................................... 17 Chapter 2: V700 During a Shift.............................................................................. 18 2.1 Power On and Off.................................................................................................................. 19 2.1.1 Powering On............................................................................................................ 19 2.1.2 Powering Off ........................................................................................................... 19 2.1.3 Forcing Power Off.................................................................................................... 19 2.2 Wearing the V700.................................................................................................................. 20 2.2.1 Mounting the Center Chest Mount........................................................................... 20 2.2.2 Mounting the Locking Molle Mount.......................................................................... 22 2.2.3 Mounting the Shirt Clip Mount..................................................................................23 2.2.4 Mounting the Jacket Clip Mount...............................................................................25 2.2.5 Mounting the Heavy Jacket Magnetic Mount........................................................... 27 2.2.6 Mounting the Belt/Strap Mount................................................................................ 28 2.3 Replacing the V700 Battery................................................................................................... 29 2.4 Battery Charge.......................................................................................................................29 2.4.1 Camera Charging Display........................................................................................30 2.4.2 Camera Shutting Down Due to Low Battery............................................................ 30 2.5 Assigning a Configuration and Checking Out........................................................................ 30 2.6 Associate a V700 with a Recording Group............................................................................ 30 2.7 Start and Stop Recorded Events........................................................................................... 31 2.7.1 Starting a Recorded Event Manually....................................................................... 31 2.7.2 Stopping a Recorded Event Manually......................................................................32 2.7.3 Categorizing a Recorded Event............................................................................... 32 10 MN009878A01-B Contents 2.7.3.1 Event Categorization on the Camera in a Recording Group......................33 2.7.4 Work in Covert Mode............................................................................................... 33 2.7.4.1 Entering Covert Mode................................................................................ 33 2.7.4.2 Exiting Covert Mode...................................................................................33 2.7.4.3 Covert Mode Alert ..................................................................................... 34 2.7.5 Bookmark/Snapshot.................................................................................................34 2.8 Muting the V700.....................................................................................................................35 2.8.1 Continuous Mute......................................................................................................35 2.8.1.1 Enabling Continuous Mute......................................................................... 35 2.8.1.2 Disabling Continuous Mute........................................................................ 35 2.8.2 Muting Audio Momentarily....................................................................................... 35 2.9 Event Upload......................................................................................................................... 36 2.9.1 Monitor Event Uploading..........................................................................................36 2.9.1.1 Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) Events........................................................36 2.9.1.2 Clearing Video Out of Camera Storage..................................................... 36 2.10 V700 in a Recording Group................................................................................................. 37 2.10.1 Recording Group Overview....................................................................................37 2.10.2 Recording Group Members....................................................................................38 2.10.3 Group Events......................................................................................................... 40 2.11 Pre-Event and Record-After-the-Fact (RATF)..................................................................... 40 2.11.1 Pre-Event Capture................................................................................................. 41 2.11.1.1 Audio........................................................................................................ 41 2.11.2 Record-After-the-Fact (RATF)............................................................................... 41 2.11.2.1 Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) Event Generation.....................................41 2.11.2.2 Storage.....................................................................................................41 2.11.2.3 Audio........................................................................................................ 41 2.11.3 Force Microphone On............................................................................................ 42 2.12 APX Integration with V700...................................................................................................42 2.12.1 Pairing the V700 with an APX Radio .................................................................... 42 2.12.2 Emergency Record Trigger....................................................................................42 2.12.3 V700 and APX Radio Pairing Flow........................................................................ 43 2.12.3.1 Pairing the APX Radio with V700.............................................................43 2.12.3.2 Re-pair V700 and APX Radio Connection............................................... 45 2.12.3.3 Out-of-Range........................................................................................... 45 2.12.3.4 No Connection in the Field.......................................................................45 2.13 Holster Aware...................................................................................................................... 45 2.13.1 Connecting Yardarm Holster Aware...................................................................... 45 2.13.2 Holster Aware Status............................................................................................. 46 2.13.3 Sensor Battery Levels............................................................................................47 11 MN009878A01-B Contents 2.14 V700 Docking Overview...................................................................................................... 47 2.14.1 Dock the V700 in a WiFi Base............................................................................... 48 2.14.2 Dock the V700 in a Transfer Station II................................................................... 49 2.14.3 Periodic Configuration Updates............................................................................. 50 2.15 USB Dock and Upload.........................................................................................................50 2.15.1 Upgrading the V700 Firmware............................................................................... 51 Chapter 3: V700 Overview...................................................................................... 52 3.1 V700 Key Features................................................................................................................ 52 3.2 V700 Configuration................................................................................................................ 53 3.3 V700 Display..........................................................................................................................54 3.3.1 Home Screen........................................................................................................... 56 3.3.2 Clearing Error Messages......................................................................................... 56 3.4 V700 Buttons......................................................................................................................... 56 3.4.1 Function Button........................................................................................................57 3.4.2 Display Backlight Button.......................................................................................... 57 3.4.3 Record Start/Stop Button......................................................................................... 58 3.4.4 Power Button .......................................................................................................... 58 3.5 Microphone............................................................................................................................ 58 3.6 V700 User-Replaceable Battery............................................................................................ 58 3.6.1 V700 Battery Maintenance.......................................................................................59 3.6.1.1 Random Reboot or Power Off....................................................................59 3.6.1.2 Low Battery Percentage Report................................................................. 59 3.6.1.3 Unresponsive Power On or Off.................................................................. 59 3.6.1.4 Battery and Camera Contamination Causes..............................................59 3.6.1.5 Cleaning the Battery and Camera..............................................................60 3.6.1.6 Repairing the Battery or Camera............................................................... 60 3.7 Feedback Indicators.............................................................................................................. 60 3.8 Video, Audio, and Subtitle Evidence......................................................................................61 3.9 Recording Reminder Alert..................................................................................................... 62 3.10 Periodic Configuration Updates........................................................................................... 62 3.11 Data and Video Encryption Support.................................................................................... 62 3.12 GPS..................................................................................................................................... 63 3.13 WiFi Base............................................................................................................................ 64 3.13.1 LED Icons.............................................................................................................. 65 3.13.2 WiFi Base LEDs.....................................................................................................67 3.13.3 WiFi Base Firmware Upgrade ...............................................................................68 3.13.3.1 Upgrading WiFi Base............................................................................... 68 Chapter 4: V700 Connection with CommandCentral Aware............................... 70 4.1 Live Streaming over LTE to CommandCentral Aware...........................................................70 12 MN009878A01-B Contents 4.2 Location Sharing over LTE to CommandCentral Aware........................................................71 Chapter 5: SmartControl for Mobile...................................................................... 73 5.1 SmartControl Overview..........................................................................................................73 5.1.1 Downloading the SmartControl App.........................................................................73 5.2 SmartControl Enablement..................................................................................................... 74 5.2.1 Troubleshooting Android Connection Setting Issues............................................... 76 5.2.2 Troubleshooting iPhone Connection Setting Issues................................................ 76 5.3 Connecting SmartControl to aV700....................................................................................... 76 5.4 SmartControl Settings............................................................................................................78 5.5 Accessing Settings When Not Connected............................................................................. 79 5.6 iOS Previously Connected Device Connection Issue............................................................ 80 5.7 Setting SmartControl Officer Preferences............................................................................. 81 5.8 Categorizing an Event........................................................................................................... 81 5.9 Streaming Live Video.............................................................................................................84 5.10 V700 Low Battery................................................................................................................ 84 5.11 Starting a State Capture...................................................................................................... 85 Chapter 6: LTE Wireless Service........................................................................... 86 6.1 LTE Service Icons..................................................................................................................86 6.2 LTE Automatic Uploads......................................................................................................... 87 6.2.1 Uploading Events Automatically over LTE...............................................................87 6.3 Uploading Events Manually over LTE....................................................................................88 13 MN009878A01-B List of Figures List of Figures Figure 1: V700 Power On and Off Button...............................................................................................19 Figure 2: Center Chest Mount................................................................................................................ 21 Figure 3: Locking Molle Mount............................................................................................................... 22 Figure 4: Shirt Clip Mount.......................................................................................................................24 Figure 5: Jacket Clip Mount....................................................................................................................26 Figure 6: Heavy Jacket Magnetic Mount................................................................................................ 27 Figure 7: Belt/Strap Mount......................................................................................................................28 Figure 8: Replacing the V700 Battery.....................................................................................................29 Figure 9: Transfer Station II....................................................................................................................49 Figure 10: V700 Components.................................................................................................................53 Figure 11: Home Screen........................................................................................................................ 54 Figure 12: SD Card and Battery............................................................................................................. 54 Figure 13: Scrolling through the Info Sequence..................................................................................... 55 Figure 14: Home Screen........................................................................................................................ 56 Figure 15: V700 Power On Button..........................................................................................................58 Figure 16: Camera and Battery Storage.................................................................................................63 Figure 17: Power LED Icons...................................................................................................................65 Figure 18: LEDs on the WiFi Base......................................................................................................... 67 Figure 19: SmartControl App for Android............................................................................................... 73 Figure 20: SmartControl App for iPhone or iPad.................................................................................... 74 Figure 21: Android Services Enablement............................................................................................... 74 Figure 22: iOS Services Enablement..................................................................................................... 75 Figure 23: Connecting to the V700.........................................................................................................77 Figure 24: Officer Preferences and Device Connection......................................................................... 78 Figure 25: iOS previously Connected Device Connection Issue............................................................ 80 Figure 26: Setting Officer Preferences................................................................................................... 81 Figure 27: Categorizing an Event........................................................................................................... 82 Figure 28: Automatic Tagging on Recording Stop..................................................................................83 Figure 29: Performing a State Capture...................................................................................................85 14 MN009878A01-B List of Tables List of Tables Table 1: Center Chest Mount Items........................................................................................................21 Table 2: Shirt Clip Mount Items.............................................................................................................. 24 Table 3: Jacket Clip Mount Items........................................................................................................... 26 Table 4: Start/Stop recorded event options............................................................................................ 31 Table 5: Bookmark/Snapshot Screens................................................................................................... 34 Table 6: Tricolor LEDs on Transfer Station II......................................................................................... 37 Table 7: Sensor Battery Levels.............................................................................................................. 47 Table 8: Info Sequence Items.................................................................................................................55 Table 9: Home Screen Icons.................................................................................................................. 56 Table 10: V700 Buttons.......................................................................................................................... 57 Table 11: Camera and Battery Storage Items........................................................................................ 63 Table 12: Power LED Items....................................................................................................................65 Table 13: Power Led Indicators..............................................................................................................65 Table 14: Activity LED Indicators............................................................................................................66 Table 15: Transfer Station II Front LED Indicators................................................................................. 66 Table 16: LEDs on the WiFi Base Items.................................................................................................67 Table 17: LED and WiFi Base Status..................................................................................................... 67 Table 18: Network Activity LED.............................................................................................................. 68 Table 19: V700 CommandCentral Aware Icons..................................................................................... 70 Table 20: SmartControl Functionalities.................................................................................................. 73 Table 21: SmartControl Services Enablement Items..............................................................................75 Table 22: iOS Services Enablement Items.............................................................................................75 Table 23: LTE Service Icons.................................................................................................................. 86 Table 24: Event Upload Configurations..................................................................................................87 15 MN009878A01-B Chapter 1 : Introduction Chapter 1 Introduction Welcome to the V700 Body-Worn Camera User Guide. This guide is designed to walk you through the basics of using your V700 to collect video and audio evidence. NOTE: This user guide documents V700 features through firmware version 1.0.1. About This Document The V700 Body-Worn Camera User Guide provides instructions for using a V700 during your shift. For more information on using a V700 during your shift, see V700 During a Shift on page 18. This user guide includes information about the basic components and operations of V700. For more information on the components and operations of your V700, see V700 Overview on page 52. This user guide also includes information for the following features:
V700 Connection with CommandCentral Aware on page 70 LTE Wireless Service on page 86 SmartControl for Mobile on page 73 The images in this document are representative of what you could see on your screen. They are meant to serve as a guide. NOTE: This document covers the basic use of V700. It is not a comprehensive manual for every possible action or situation you could experience when using your V700. If you have a question about your V700 that is not covered in this document, contact your Motorola Solutions representative. 1.1 About the V700 Body-Worn Camera The V700 Body-Worn Camera captures, processes, and stores video and audio evidence. The V700 includes the following:
Dual microphones (Microphone on page 58) Display screen (V700 Display on page 54) Buttons (V700 Buttons on page 56) Top Status LED User-replaceable battery (V700 User-Replaceable Battery on page 58) Storage capacity for V700 is 24-36 hours at max resolution and frame rate Ultra-wide dynamic range image sensor The V700 connects to your agency evidence management system for provisioning and uploading recorded events. NOTE: For more information, see V700 During a Shift on page 18 and V700 Overview on page 52. 16 MN009878A01-B Chapter 1 : Introduction 1.2 Related Documents and Information For subjects related to your V700 body-worn camera that are not covered by the V700 Body-Worn Camera User Guide, see the following documents:
M500 In-Car Video System User Guide V300 Body-Worn Camera User Guide Transfer Station II Quick Start User Guide 4RE In-Car Video User Guide 1.3 Prerequisites and Requirements Ensure that you complete the prerequisites and meet the requirements. Prerequisites The V700 requires a second-generation transfer station, WiFi Base, and/or USB Base NOTE: You can dock either the stand-alone battery in the bases or the camera and battery together. Docking both allows you to charge and upload at the same time. However, docking a spare battery allows you to have a second battery available when needed. The camera and battery only dock in one direction. Transfer Station II provisions the V700 to your agency evidence management system USB upload requires that your Primary Domain Name is set in your agency evidence management system and that you have an IP address set for the DNS Server Primary field For more information, see USB Dock and Upload on page 50. Reserved IP Addresses V700 components require the following reserved IP addresses:
192.168.99.x (USB and WiFi Base) 192.168.98.x (SmartControl) 192.168.97.x (reserved for future use) If you assign your in-car network any of these IP address ranges, you may have communication issues. Warning WARNING: If the V700 is lost or there is any suspicion that it was tampered with, do not connect the camera to your network or place it in a USB Base or WiFi Base. You should return the camera to Motorola Solutions to download the evidence and perform a factory reset; this ensures no damage is caused to the servers by malicious code placed on the camera. 17 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Chapter 2 V700 During a Shift The V700 Body-Worn Camera allows you to capture, process, and store video and audio evidence. Your V700 connects to your agency evidence management system for provisioning and uploading evidence. The following sections provide you with instructions of common tasks that you need to perform on the V700 throughout your shift:
Start of a Shift Powering On on page 19 Wearing the V700 on page 20 Replacing the V700 Battery on page 29 Battery Charge on page 29 Assigning a Configuration and Checking Out on page 30 During a Shift Associate a V700 with a Recording Group on page 30 Start and Stop Recorded Events on page 31 Muting the V700 on page 35 Event Upload on page 36 V700 in a Recording Group on page 37 Pre-Event and Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) on page 40 APX Integration with V700 on page 42 Holster Aware on page 45 18 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift End of a Shift V700 Docking Overview on page 47 USB Dock and Upload on page 50 Powering Off on page 19 2.1 Power On and Off To power the V700 on and off, you must use the Power button. The Power button is the oval shape on the bottom of the V700 battery. Figure 1: V700 Power On and Off Button 2.1.1 Powering On Procedure:
On the bottom of the camera battery, press and release the Power button. The camera goes through the booting and information sequences. When it is ready to use, the display shows the number of events in storage and displays a solid green LED light on the top. Depending on your agency configuration, the camera vibrates or plays an ascending tone sound. 2.1.2 Powering Off Procedure:
1 On the bottom of the camera, press and release the Power button. 2 After the prompt, press the Power button again. After you press the Power button the second time, the screen shows SHUTTING DOWN, and the green LED turns off. Depending on your configuration, descending tones sound. 2.1.3 Forcing Power Off WARNING: Avoid forcing the V700 to power off by abruptly removing the battery without going through the shut down procedure above. Forcing the camera to power off can result in data corruption. 19 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift If the V700 stops responding to commands, or if technical services instructs you to, you can force the camera to power off. Procedure:
To force the camera to power off, remove the battery. The V700 may show System Recovery on the screen at the next boot. NOTE: Allow the camera up to 10 minutes to complete the storage verification process. 2.2 Wearing the V700 The V700 can be mounted to your uniform using the following types of mounts:
Center Chest Mount (Mounting the Center Chest Mount on page 20) Locking Molle Mount (Mounting the Locking Molle Mount on page 22) Shirt Clip Mount (Mounting the Shirt Clip Mount on page 23) Jacket Clip Mount (Mounting the Jacket Clip Mount on page 25) Heavy Jacket Magnetic Mount (Mounting the Heavy Jacket Magnetic Mount on page 27) Belt/Strap Mount (Mounting the Belt/Strap Mount on page 28) WARNING: Potential Medical Device Interference. This Center Chest Mount and the Heavy Jacket Mount incorporate very strong magnets. If you are using a personal medical device, such as a pacemaker or other programmable medical devices, talk to your health care provider, or consult the manufacturer of your device before using these mounts. Determine if your personal medical device can be used in close proximity to magnets. If in doubt, do not use the Center Chest or Heavy Jacket Mounts. Talk to your health care provider if you are experiencing any symptoms or have questions regarding magnets. Also, be aware that magnets can damage other products, including cell phones, computers, hard drives, and other electronic devices, as well as credit cards and magnetic media. Keep these mounts away from any devices that can be affected by a magnetic field. You should wear the V700 on your clothing and vest where it is most comfortable, convenient, and secure. Ensure that the lens is not obstructed and that it is aimed at the horizon. 2.2.1 Mounting the Center Chest Mount The center chest mount is made to fit over the buttons or zipper in the center of your chest. You can also wear it over your pocket or on the protective vest or jacket. The magnets are strong with 65 pounds of pressure when snapped together. When and where to use:
20 Figure 2: Center Chest Mount MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Table 1: Center Chest Mount Items Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 6 Brackets Levers on both sides Anchor tabs Over-shirt bracket Under-shirt bracket Camera slots Procedure:
1 To separate the under-shirt bracket from the over-shirt bracket, perform the following actions:
a Hold the under-shirt bracket in one hand with the thumb on top and the two middle fingers on the bottom. b Raise the levers on both sides. c While holding the levers up, pull the brackets apart. 2 Match the anchor tabs and camera slots on the over-shirt bracket with the back of the camera keeping the magnets apart. You can attach the camera before or after the mount is in place. 3 Place the under-shirt bracket under your shirt where you want to wear your camera. 4 Line up the anchor slots and place the over-shirt against the under-shirt bracket, with your shirt between them. These snap together forcefully. 21 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift The magnets on both brackets line up automatically, securing the mount to your shirt. CAUTION: WATCH YOUR FINGERS! Because of the strength of the magnets, separating the brackets requires some effort. Realigning the brackets causes them to snap together forcefully. Keep your hand flat and keep your fingers away from the snap-to area. 2.2.2 Mounting the Locking Molle Mount The Locking Molle Mount, when locked, is secure and cannot detach from the vest unless you slide the locking pins in a downward motion. Prerequisites: Install the mount on the vest before you connect the camera to the mount. Figure 3: Locking Molle Mount Procedure:
1 Determine which two sewn seams on the Molle vest you want to mount the camera to. 2 On the back of the mount, find the tabs on the side of the spring-loaded pin Molle-Lok attachments. 3 On each Molle-Lok attachment, grab and squeeze the tabs at the bottom of the attachment until the spring-loaded pin latch releases. 4 Slide the two Molle-Lok attachments connected to the mount over and through the sewn seams on the vest. 22 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 5 Align the Molle-Lok attachments and connect them to the spring-loaded pin. 6 Align the camera with the two tabs on the bottom of the mount and snap the camera in to the mount. 7 To remove the camera, press the silver bar and pull straight up on the camera and battery. 8 Remove the camera and battery. 2.2.3 Mounting the Shirt Clip Mount When and where to use:
23 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Figure 4: Shirt Clip Mount Table 2: Shirt Clip Mount Items Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 6 Clip Brackets Camera anchor tabs Back Front Shirt clip Procedure:
1 To attach the camera to the front of the mount before clipping on the shirt, perform the following actions. a Set the camera in the anchor tabs. b Press it into the brackets at the top of the mount. 2 Rotate the clip so that the camera is in the vertical position. 3 Press the clip to open it and clip it to your shirt. 4 Press the silver bar on top to release the camera. 24 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.2.4 Mounting the Jacket Clip Mount The Jacket Clip Mount is one piece with a clip on the back that rotates so that the camera remains upright in a vertical position. The jacket clip is the same as the shirt clip, just a heavier version, with a stronger, larger clip, that clips on jackets, vests, coats, and over zippers. When and where to use:
25 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Figure 5: Jacket Clip Mount Table 3: Jacket Clip Mount Items Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 6 Front Back Brackets Camera anchor tabs Clip on back of mount Jacket clip Procedure:
1 Attach the camera to the front of the mount before clipping on the jacket. 2 Set the camera in the anchor tabs. 3 Press the camera into the brackets at the top of the mount. 4 Rotate the clip so that the camera is in the vertical position. 5 Press the clip to open it. 26 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 6 Clip the mount to your jacket. 7 Press the silver bar on top to release the camera. 2.2.5 Mounting the Heavy Jacket Magnetic Mount The Heavy Jacket Magnetic Mount provides an option to wear the camera on heavier materials, such as a jacket or other outerwear. When and where to use:
Figure 6: Heavy Jacket Magnetic Mount Procedure:
1 Perform the following actions to separate the under-shirt bracket from the over-shirt bracket:
a Hold the under-shirt bracket in one hand with the thumb on top and the two middle fingers on the bottom. b Raise the levers on both sides. c While holding the levers up, pull the brackets apart. 2 Match the anchor tabs and camera slots on the over-shirt bracket with the back of the camera keeping the magnets apart. NOTE: You can attach the camera before or after the mount is in place. 3 Place the under-shirt bracket under your shirt where you want to wear your camera. 4 Line up the anchor slots and place the over-shirt against the under-shirt bracket, with your shirt between them. The anchor slots snap together forcefully. CAUTION: WATCH YOUR FINGERS! Because of the strength of the magnets, separating the brackets requires some effort. Realigning the brackets causes them to snap together forcefully. Keep your hand flat and keep your fingers away from the snap-to area. 27 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.2.6 Mounting the Belt/Strap Mount The Belt/Strap Mount gives you the option to mount the camera to a belt or strap on your uniform. Prerequisites: Install the mount before you connect the camera to the mount. Figure 7: Belt/Strap Mount Procedure:
1 Determine the belt or strap you want to mount the camera to. NOTE: The TEK-LOK attachments can be adjusted to fit the width of your belt/strap width. 2 On the top of the TEK-LOK attachment, throw over the secondary lock tab. 3 Press both release tabs toward each other and open the TEK-LOK attachment. 4 Place the TEK-LOK attachment over the top of your belt. 5 Press and squeeze the TEK-LOK attachment closed. NOTE: The TEK-LOK will click into place when it is secure. 6 Throw over the secondary lock tab. 7 Align the camera with the two tabs on the bottom of the mount and snap the camera in to the mount. 8 To remove the camera, press the silver bar and pull straight up on the camera and battery. 9 Remove the camera and battery. 28 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.3 Replacing the V700 Battery The power source of the V700 is a removable battery that is easy to replace and allows continuous operation with minimal disruption. You can remove the V700 battery and charge it separately from the camera. NOTICE: A charged spare battery ensures that you always have a source of power ready to use without requiring the camera to remain in a charging dock or transfer station while the battery is charging. Figure 8: Replacing the V700 Battery Procedure:
1 Power off the camera (Powering Off on page 19). 2 Slide the silver latch on the back of the camera to the left. 3 Pull straight down on the battery. Do not lift out. 4 To replace the battery, slide it into the tracks and push it in until it clicks. 2.4 Battery Charge A full charge in the Transfer Station or WiFi Base can take up to six hours. The battery life depends on the device configuration and LTE service. Dock the camera with the battery or just the standalone battery in the WiFi Base, USB Base, or Transfer Station II. NOTE: Before using the camera for the first time, fully charge the battery and configure the camera. Motorola Solutions recommends using the V700 USB Base plugged into an outlet or the transfer station inside your agency when fully charging the battery. 29 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Charging a battery in a vehicle that is not running can impact the vehicle battery. For the best battery life and fastest charging times, you should charge the V700 in a cool environment. IMPORTANT: If the ambient temperature gets too hot (40 C / 104 F), the battery may stop charging. You must not leave the camera and battery in a hot car. 2.4.1 Camera Charging Display While the V700 is charging, the event count remains on the screen. When the camera is fully charged:
The display shows CHARGE COMPLETE once, then returns to the Home screen The display shows 100% and a fully-filled Battery Charge icon on the Home screen The green LED displays a steady light Two tones sound 2.4.2 Camera Shutting Down Due to Low Battery If a low battery error is issued, you should shut down the V700; this can leave two to four minutes of run time before the camera runs out of power. You should switch to your charged backup battery. 2.5 Assigning a Configuration and Checking Out Depending on how your agency assigns its cameras, you may need to configure and assign the camera each time it is checked out. NOTE: Before using the camera for the first time, fully charge the battery and assign a configuration and officer to the camera. For more information about configuring your V700, see V700 Configuration on page 53. Procedure:
1 Dock the camera in the Transfer Station II connected to a computer with access to your agency evidence management system. 2 Using your agency evidence management system, perform the following actions:
a Create and assign a configuration to the docked camera. b Assign an officer to the docked camera. IMPORTANT: If you have the battery with the attached camera docked, ensure that you remove them together. Undocking one without the other can damage your data. The camera vibrates when the update completes. If automatic configuration updates are enabled, the V700 checks every 10 minutes to see if there is a change to the configuration. 2.6 Associate a V700 with a Recording Group When you dock your V700 in a WiFi Base, the camera pairs with the base. This pairing allows the camera to associate with the local recording group that includes other V700 or V300 cameras and, 30 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift if present, the 4RE or M500 In-Car Video Systems. A recording group is typically associated with a vehicle. NOTE: Ensure the date/time is set correctly on the M500 before you associate your body-worn camera with the in-car system. If the date/time is incorrect, contact your system administrator. For more information, see V700 in a Recording Group on page 37. NOTE: You can pair multiple V700 or V300 cameras with the same WiFi Base. 2.7 Start and Stop Recorded Events You can use the Record Start/Stop button on the front of the camera to start or stop a recorded event. See the table below for the different configurations your agency can set to start or stop a recorded event on the V700. If your V700 is a member of a recording group, the camera can start or stop a recorded event automatically. Another group member can alert that it has started or stopped an event. For more information, see V700 in a Recording Group on page 37. NOTE: Your agency configures how your V700 starts and stops recorded events in your agency evidence management system. Table 4: Start/Stop recorded event options Item Description Single Press to start/stop an event Start/stop recorded event confirmation Press and hold to start/stop an event Press and release the Record Start/Stop but-
ton to start or stop a recorded event. Double press the Record Start/Stop button within five seconds to start or stop a recorded event. Press and hold the Record Start/Stop button for 1 to 5 seconds, depending on your agency configuration, to start or stop a recorded event. NOTICE: You can start or stop an event from the SmartControl app. 2.7.1 Starting a Recorded Event Manually You can manually start a recorded event on the V700. Procedure:
1 On the front of the camera, press the Record Start/Stop button. NOTE: Your agency configures your Record Start/Stop options in your agency evidence management system. See Start and Stop Recorded Events on page 31 for the available configurations. The display shows RECORDING, and the circle in the center blinks to indicate that the camera is recording. 31 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift The top and front LEDs illuminate in red to indicate that the camera is actively recording. If the camera is in Covert Mode, the top and front LEDs remain off even while the camera is actively recording. As the recorded event continues, the display shows the storage indicators updating. 2.7.2 Stopping a Recorded Event Manually You can manually stop a recorded event on the V700. Procedure:
1 On the front of the camera, press the Record Start/Stop button. 2 Press the Record Start/Stop button again within five seconds. NOTE: If the record stop confirmation is not enabled, you only need to press the record button once to stop an event. IMPORTANT: The V700 can be configured in your agency evidence management system to not allow an event to stop manually. If you cannot stop the event manually when you press the Record button, two low tones sound with vibration, depending on your alert notification selections, and the display reads IGNORED for three seconds. NOTE: Your agency configures your Record Start/Stop options in your agency evidence management system. See Start and Stop Recorded Events on page 31 for the available configurations. On the camera, the display and front red LED turn off and the top LED turns green. After a recorded event stops, if your configuration requires event categorization, the event categorization sequence starts. For more information, see Categorizing a Recorded Event on page 32. 2.7.3 Categorizing a Recorded Event Event categorization is set up in the V700 configuration of your agency evidence management system, in which your agency sets the categories. Procedure:
1 Stop the event manually or allow the camera to stop it automatically. If the camera is not in Covert Mode, the Display Backlight turns on and the display shows the default category on the top. If tagging is not required, the prompt times-out after 30 seconds. 2 Press and release the Display Backlight button as many times as needed to move through the list of event categories. 3 Press the top Function button when the event category you want to select appears on the display. 32 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift The display shows Saved in small text, including the event category in large text. The camera vibrates when the category is saved. Depending on your alert configuration, one long tone sounds with a vibration. If another recorded event starts either manually or automatically while the camera is in the middle of the event categorization sequence, the camera saves the event category as UNKNOWN and starts a new event. The event can be categorized later in your agency evidence management system. 2.7.3.1 Event Categorization on the Camera in a Recording Group If your V700 is a member of a recording group that connects with a 4RE or M500 DVR, the camera can automatically accept an event category from the 4RE or M500 DVR group member as its own category. Any category selected directly on the V700 overrides the 4RE or M500 category. If your V700 is connected to the SmartControl smartphone app, you can categorize an event using SmartControl and add secondary event tags. Any category selected on SmartControl overrides a 4RE or M500 category. If you categorize an event on both the camera and the smartphone app, the last selected category, regardless of the device, is applied to the event. For more information, see SmartControl for Mobile on page 73. 2.7.4 Work in Covert Mode In Covert Mode, the V700 makes no sound and all LED lights turn off. Depending on your configuration, the display backlight can light up on demand. Additionally, depending on the configured alert notifications, the camera can vibrate in Covert Mode. All V700 functions operate the same way in Covert Mode as they do in normal mode. NOTE: Whether Covert Mode is available, it is configurable by your administrator. 2.7.4.1 Entering Covert Mode Procedure:
To transition to Covert Mode, press and hold the Function button for five seconds. You can enter Covert Mode using the SmartControl smartphone app. For more information, see Streaming Live Video on page 84.) The camera vibrates and displays in Covert Mode. The display changes from black on white to gray on black during Covert Mode. All content on the display is the same in Covert Mode as in normal mode. 2.7.4.2 Exiting Covert Mode Procedure:
To exit Covert Mode, press and hold the Function button for five seconds. You can enter Covert Mode using the SmartControl smartphone app. The camera plays a tone. The LEDs turn on and the Display Backlight LED remains on. 33 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.7.4.3 Covert Mode Alert When the V700 is entering or exiting Covert Mode and an error condition occurs, the camera alerts you by vibrating or playing tones. The following scenarios can occur:
The vibration and tones stop if you do not acknowledge the error and go into Covert Mode. The exception is that the camera continues to vibrate or tones sound if the alert is a critical alert for evidence capture When Covert Mode ends, the camera starts to vibrate or play tones because the error was not acknowledged. After the alert is acknowledged, the vibration and tones stop If you acknowledge the error before accessing Covert Mode, the camera goes into Covert Mode. When you exit Covert Mode, no notifications are presented 2.7.5 Bookmark/Snapshot If enabled by your administrator, you can create a bookmark and/or snapshot while the V700 is recording an event. Creating a bookmark allows you to save a specific moment during a recorded event, and creating a snapshot allows you to create and save an image of a specific moment during a recorded event. NOTE: Your administrator must enable either or both features in your agency evidence management system. Press and release the Function button to create a bookmark or snapshot during a recorded event. Depending on your agency configuration, one of the following screens will appear on your V700:
Table 5: Bookmark/Snapshot Screens Icon Description Bookmark only Snapshot only Both Bookmark and Snapshot 34 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.8 Muting the V700 A configuration setting in your agency evidence management system controls whether you can mute your V700 during a recorded event. NOTE: Depending on your agency preference, you can have either Continuous Mute
(Continuous Mute on page 35) or Momentary Mute (Muting Audio Momentarily on page 35). 2.8.1 Continuous Mute You can mute your V700 during an event by pressing and holding the Function button. The camera can be configured to alert you while it is muted. Your administrator configures the alert type under officer device preferences. 2.8.1.1 Enabling Continuous Mute Procedure:
If enabled by your administrator, you can press and hold the Function button for two seconds to mute the microphone during an active recorded event. While muted, the camera displays MUTE ON. 2.8.1.2 Disabling Continuous Mute Procedure:
1 To disable continuous mute, press and hold the Function button for two seconds. The camera displays MUTE OFF. NOTE: The camera can be configured to unmute itself. Your administrator configures a maximum duration for muting. When this configuration is enabled by your administrator, the camera unmutes itself after the configured number of minutes. The camera creates a beep/vibe notification 5 seconds before it unmutes and again when the device unmutes itself. 2.8.2 Muting Audio Momentarily Procedure:
1 Press and hold the Display Backlight button to briefly mute the audio. NOTE: Your administrator must enable the configuration setting to allow muting. 35 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2 Release the Display Backlight button to unmute the audio. NOTICE: You cannot mute the audio while you are categorizing a recorded event. After you finish categorizing, you can again mute the audio. Audio resumes after you release the button. 2.9 Event Upload The V700 can upload directly to your agency evidence management system. You can upload recorded events from your V700 while it is docked in the following ways:
Transfer Station II Events upload automatically from V700 in the Transfer Station II WiFi Base Events upload automatically from V700 if the WiFi Base is connected to your agency evidence management system NOTE: Motorola Solutions supports upload over a cellular connection using the Sierra Wireless AirLink MG90 High Performance Multi-Network Vehicle Router, and Cradlepoint COR IBR900 Series or IBR1100 Series. Your agency must configure the camera to upload events to your agency evidence management system from the WiFi Base. USB Base You can upload recorded events automatically depending on the settings in your agency evidence management system. While the camera is uploading from a USB Base, you can monitor its upload progress on the camera or in your agency evidence management system. NOTE: Events that you have categorized as critical events are always uploaded first. 2.9.1 Monitor Event Uploading You can monitor the upload progress in your agency evidence management system. 2.9.1.1 Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) Events You can use your agency evidence management system to define and request a Record-After-the-
Fact (RATF) event from a docked camera configured with RATF enabled. The V700 generates the RATF event and uploads it while docked. For more information, see Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) on page 41. 2.9.1.2 Clearing Video Out of Camera Storage Once the V700 has successfully uploaded its recorded events to evidence storage, the camera no longer protects that storage space. It can be used for future recorded events. Understanding Tricolor LEDs on Each Transfer Station II Slot The Transfer Station II has a tricolor LED for each slot that provides information about what is happening in that slot (1). These LED lights (1) let you know the upload progress, charging status, and any fault conditions. 36 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Item Description 1 2 Network activity indicator Charge indicator Table 6: Tricolor LEDs on Transfer Station II Charging Color Green Network Linking Status Description Color Status Description Solid Battery charged Green Solid Connected to Ether-
net Green Flashing Battery charging Green Flashing Data uploading Red Amber Solid Solid Error condition Red Camera docked Amber Solid Off Error condition Backend not connect-
ed from transfer sta-
tion link 2.10 V700 in a Recording Group When you dock your V700 in a WiFi Base, the camera pairs with the base. This pairing lets the camera associate with other V700 cameras as a local recording group. Recording group members include the following:
V700 or V300 cameras Smart Power Switch 4RE and M500 DVRs 2.10.1 Recording Group Overview The decision to create an event for the group recording is made by each device in the local recording group network. Starting a recorded event on one device alerts the other devices in the group through the WiFi Base that there has been a change in recording status on that device. In response, the other devices in the group can start recording the event, each according to its own configuration. Recordings from the individual cameras are uploaded and automatically linked in evidence management system for viewing and sharing. 37 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.10.2 Recording Group Members A recording group consists of a network of devices communicating with each other whenever one of them changes its recording status. Although a recording group is typically linked to a vehicle, the V700 can form its own recording group. A local recording group can include the following elements:
Up to eight V700 or V300 cameras One WiFi Base 4RE DVR, firmware version 4.0.7 or later (optional) M500 DVR, firmware version 1.0.5.43 or later (optional) A Smart Power Switch V700 Camera Functions As part of the local recording group network, the V700:
Pairs with the WiFi Base After docking and pairing the cameras with the WiFi Base, the pairing associates the cameras with the local recording group. NOTE: You can have a maximum of eight cameras in a recording group with one WiFi Base. Connects to 4RE DVR firmware version of 4.0.7 or later (optional) Connects to M500 DVR firmware version 1.0.5.43 or later Connects to the Smart Power Switch The Smart Power Switch functions as the central connection point for a recording group Through the Smart Power Switch, the devices connect together to form a network, letting the 4RE or M500 DVR and/or V700 group members communicate with each other. Intelligently manages power within the local recording group network The Smart Power Switch can detect the status of the devices in the network, whether they are powered on or have powered themselves off after finishing event upload or charging. When the switch detects that the devices in the local recording group network no longer need power, it shuts down any remaining devices connected to the local network, including itself. Initiates group recordings The V700 notifies the WiFi Base that it started a recorded event. The WiFi Base then uses the group network to notify the other group members that V700, has started an event. The other group members can join the group by starting their own recorded events. Responds to group recording starts or stops by other group members Through the recording group network, the WiFi Base is notified by other group members when they start or stop a group recording. The base notifies the cameras and a camera can start or stop its own recorded event with the recording group. NOTICE: If the 4RE DVR, M500 DVR, V700, or V300 are members of the same recording group, the 4RE or M500 DVR can initiate group event starts, stops, and categorization. Also, the V700 or V300 can join in on the group actions depending on your agency evidence management system configuration. IMPORTANT: If a V700 moves out of range of its associated recording group network, it does not receive notifications of group recording starts and stops until it is back in range. The V700 provides a wireless access point (hotspot) for the SmartControl smartphone application. For information about connecting the SmartControl application, see SmartControl for Mobile on page 73. 38 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Smart Power Switch As part of the local recording group network, the Smart Power Switch functions as the local network DHCP server for the local recording group network and other devices connected to it, such as wireless radio. The Smart Power Switch is required to form a recording group. There can only be one Smart Power Switch in a recording group. NOTE: M500 In-Car Video Systems with firmware version 1.1.0 or later automatically have the Integrated Smart Power Switch functionality enabled. External Smart Power Switch hardware is no longer required. 4RE and M500 DVRs NOTE: The 4RE DVR must be at firmware version 4.0.7 or later to participate in a recording group. The M500 DVR must be at firmware version 1.0.5.43 or later to participate in a recording group. If your agency uses the 4RE or M500 DVR as part of a local recording group network, the 4RE or M500 DVR:
Initiates group recordings 4RE and M500 uses the group event network to inform the other group members when it starts an event. The other members can join by starting their own recorded events. Stops group recordings Only the 4RE or M500 DVR can stop all recorded events that are part of the group event at the same time Responds to group recording initiation by other group members Through the group event network, the 4RE or M500 DVR is informed by other group members when they start a recorded event. The 4RE or M500 can then join the group by starting its own recorded event. Passes on its event categorization to other members' recorded events in the group recording The category you assign to a recorded event on the 4RE or M500 DVR is passed to other group members' recorded events. The other group members can choose to categorize their own recorded events, overriding any category passed to them by the 4RE or M500 DVR. Shares Covert Mode entry and exit with other group members Other members can choose to enter or exit Covert Mode, and there can only be one 4RE or M500 DVR in a recording group. For more information about the 4RE or M500 DVR and group recordings, see the 4RE DVR In-Car Video User Guide or M500 In-Car Video System User Guide. IMPORTANT: The 4RE or M500 DVR is not required to form a recording group. Other Devices in a Recording Group Other devices in a recording group can include the following:
Radio If present in the system, the wireless radio connects to the Smart Power Switch. The 4RE or M500 DVR in addition to the V700 can use the radio to interact with your agency evidence management system through the Smart Power Switch, an agency network access point. The connection between the wireless radio and the agency network is independent of the local recording group network. MDC or Laptop The MDC (mobile data computer) or other laptop computer connects to the Smart Power Switch. 39 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift The computer only connects to the system through the Smart Power Switch; it is not powered through the switch. If the computer is configured to be a DHCP client, it can also get its network address from the Smart Power Switch. 2.10.3 Group Events The collaboration of V700 and V300 cameras and the 4RE and M500 In-Car Video Systems creates a group event. Each device in a recording group creates individual recorded events of the same incident;
this shows the individual event from different perspectives to create a more comprehensive view of an incident. V700 Camera Behavior When a group event is uploaded to your agency evidence management system, the individual events are automatically linked together. The following camera behavior scenarios can occur when recording a group event:
Manually starting a recording group event after it automatically starts one You can press the Record Start/Stop button within 10 seconds of the automatic start. The camera may ask you to confirm that you want to stop the recorded event with your Record Start/Stop button press. However, if you do not press the Record Start/Stop button again within five seconds, the camera continues recording the event as part of the group event. The camera stops recording the event if you press the button a second time within five seconds. The camera that initiated the group event goes out-of-range during the group event All the devices in the recording group keep recording an event until the 4RE or M500 DVR stops the group event or each member stops its own event, each according to its configuration. The initiating device moving out-of-range does not affect the other devices' ability to start, stop, or categorize their own events. The camera goes out-of-range but keeps recording the event until it is manually stopped A camera that goes out-of-range does not affect its ability to start, stop, and categorize its own events. The group event is stopped while the camera that is part of that group event is out-of-range The out-of-range camera keeps recording the event until it is manually stopped or moves back into range of the recording group network. When the camera that is still recording an event moves back into range, it is informed that its associated group has stopped the group event. It can then stop its own event according to its configuration. 2.11 Pre-Event and Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) You may want to capture part of an event that was not recorded as part of the original recorded event. Due to the fact that the V700 continuously records, you can capture that part of the event. Pre-Event Capture lets you add up to two minutes of video before a recorded event, while Record-
After-the-Fact (RATF) lets you continuously capture and save video. When either Pre-Event or RATF are enabled, the camera continuously captures and saves video when it is powered on. You enable both in your agency evidence management system. For more information, see your agency evidence management system documentation. 40 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.11.1 Pre-Event Capture Pre-Event supported values are none, 15 seconds, 30 seconds, 1 minute, and 2 minutes. You can configure Pre-Event to include audio. You can have audio for the event but not for Pre-Event. The evidence is always written to storage. You can start a recorded event at 2:15 PM and stop it at 2:35 PM. With a Pre-Event Capture time configured for one minute, the recorded event includes video recorded from 2:14 PM to 2:35 PM. NOTE: Pre-Event only works if your camera is continuously recording. 2.11.1.1 Audio Audio is not included with Pre-Event video unless your agency enables the Force Microphone On feature. Typically, the V700 only begins to record audio when you start a recorded event. For more information, see Force Microphone On on page 42. 2.11.2 Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) Enabling Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) lets you continuously capture and save video you can use to generate an RATF event. You can enable RATF in your agency evidence management system. The V700 works as a DVR and camera combination to record events. When you start and stop a recording either manually or automatically, the camera protects the segment between the recording start and stop as the recorded event. 2.11.2.1 Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) Event Generation Any time the V700 is docked in the WiFi Base, and there is network connectivity to your agency evidence management system, V700 can generate a Record-After-the-Fact (RATF). You should use your agency evidence management system to send a manual request to the camera to generate and retrieve a RATF event. For more information on generating a RATF from the V700, see your agency evidence management system documentation. 2.11.2.2 Storage When you enable RATF, the camera continuously overwrites the oldest unprotected or nonrecorded event area in storage with any newly captured video or recorded events. The overwrite process continues until all unprotected video is overwritten with recorded events or RATF. After overwriting, you must upload recorded events to your agency evidence management system to free up storage space before you can continue to use the camera. 2.11.2.3 Audio Audio is not typically included in the saved video when RATF is enabled. The V700 only begins to record audio when a recorded event is started. You can include audio whenever the camera is capturing and saving video if you enable the Force Microphone On feature. 41 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.11.3 Force Microphone On The Force Microphone On feature lets you capture audio whenever V700 is capturing and saving videos. Audio is not typically included in pre-event video or Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) events. Your administrator configures the Force Microphone On feature in your agency evidence management system configuration settings. 2.12 APX Integration with V700 Motorola Solutions APX two-way radios and V700 cameras now work together to capture video evidence. The V700 camera connects through Bluetooth to an APX radio, and is triggered to start recording whenever the radio enters emergency mode. Dispatch can also trigger emergency mode remotely. 2.12.1 Pairing the V700 with an APX Radio If group event is enabled and there are other cameras in the same group, the Emergency Mode can start a group event. The event does not stop automatically when the radio leaves Emergency Mode. The event must be stopped manually or stopped by an in-car video system. Do not interrupt the pairing process once it starts; this can cause difficulty in pairing in the future. The following APX radios are integrated with the V700:
Two-Way RADIO (non-HAZLOC models only) APX NEXT, APX NEXT XE
(Requires 2021.4 release) The following radios require the 2021.2 firmware release:
APX 8000, APX 8000XE, models 2.5 and 3.5 APX 7000, APX 7000XE, models 2.5 and 3.5 APX 8000, APX 8000XE, models 2.5 and 3.5 APX 6000, 6000XE, models 2.5 and 3.5 APX 4000, models 2.5 and 3.5 IMPORTANT: IP address 192.168.97.x is reserved for APX or V700 integration. 2.12.2 Emergency Record Trigger V700 and APX emergency pairing is configured in your agency evidence management system for V700. The emergency trigger is sent whenever the radio enters an emergency and the V700 automatically starts recording. The V700 continues to record until the Record Stop/Start button on the camera is pressed or a group recording is stopped. A secure Bluetooth link connects the camera and the radio. In a group recording situation, all cameras are started simultaneously. An officer can disconnect from the radio through the radio Bluetooth menu. If a camera is connecting to a radio that it was previously paired to, the connection happens automatically. If the camera is already paired to a radio and the officer wants to pair it to a different radio, the officer has to restart the discovery process. 42 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift If either the V700 or radio is rebooted, the rebooted device has to re-establish the connection. If the other device is out-of-range, the user must connect them manually using the radio screen. When the radio triggers emergency mode, the V700 logs it in metadata. It includes the reason reported from the radio for entering emergency mode. The camera does this even if an event is already in progress. 2.12.3 V700 and APX Radio Pairing Flow The V700 and the APX Radio have to connect to use the emergency record trigger. You should perform the connection when first checking out the camera at the beginning of your shift. Pairing is only required once to enable the emergency recording trigger. The radio user has to perform the pairing process; this ensures that the recording start on emergency trigger occurs without delay. The V700 can pair with the radio, SmartControl, the smart phone app, and Holster Aware. The pairing cannot be done in parallel. You must first pair with one device, then the other devices. 2.12.3.1 Pairing the APX Radio with V700 IMPORTANT: The radio runs a DHCP server and assigns an IP to the camera. The ports used for the communication are fixed. When the connection is complete, the camera shows the device name. Procedure:
1 Select the Bluetooth menu on the radio. 2 Select Search Devices to find the camera. 3 Search on the radio until the device name of the camera appears. 4 Compare the pin numbers on the radio and camera to ensure they match. 43 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift The camera presents the pin to the screen. The same pin is presented on the radio screen and the officer compares the pins and confirms it on the radio screen. 5 Press OK on the radio to accept the matching pins. 6 Press the orange button to initiate an emergency trigger or dispatch can initiate the emergency trigger and start the camera recording. If the radio is already in emergency mode when they pair, the camera starts recording immediately. When the operator presses the orange button on the radio, the camera interacts immediately with the radio and begins recording. The V700 also starts emergency recording on notification from dispatch. 44 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.12.3.2 Re-pair V700 and APX Radio Connection If you need to pair your V700 to the APX Radio again, before pressing both buttons on the V700, you must go into the APX Radio settings and delete the V700 from the radio; this ensures a successful connection between the devices. 2.12.3.3 Out-of-Range If a camera moves out-of-range from the radio, the radio tries to reconnect for approximately eight minutes. If the camera stays out-of-range longer than eight minutes, you have to reconnect the two manually by using the radio screen. 2.12.3.4 No Connection in the Field If a radio triggers an emergency and the V700 is not paired with the radio, you need to go through the pairing process to connect them. See Pairing the APX Radio with V700 on page 43 for more information. Once a V700 is paired with an APX Radio, when either the radio or the camera reboots, the rebooted device tries to re-establish the connection. If the camera is not in range at the time of this re-connection attempt, you need to go into the APX Radio menu and manually start the connection from there. 2.13 Holster Aware Yardarm Holster Aware detects when a weapon is removed from or inserted into a holster. It wirelessly activates a recording on the V700 when a holster sensor is paired with the V700. You can have a holster sensor and APX Radio connected at the same time. You can have a holster sensor, APX Radio, and SmartControl smart phone app, connected at the same time. After you check out a camera and pair with a holster, the pairing information is assigned to your ID. It is stored in the officer preferences. At the end of the shift it is uploaded to your agency evidence management system to be used on the next shift. The next time you checkout, your pairing information is sent to the camera as part of checkout. 2.13.1 Connecting Yardarm Holster Aware Procedure:
1 Connect the power supply to the sensor to pair the sensor with a V700. You have one minute to pair the sensor and camera. 2 Press the Function and Display Backlight buttons for five seconds to enter the pairing menu. The discover process cycles through SmartControl, APX Radio, then Firearm. The discover process cycles through APX Radio then Firearm. 45 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 3 Press the Display Backlight button to navigate through the menu to Firearm. 4 Press the Function button to select a Firearm when the Firearm screen appears. The camera starts searching for nearby sensors, showing a list of sensors. NOTE: Connectivity issues can occur if you are in an area with a lot of wireless noise. Move away from that area and try to connect again if you are having trouble connecting. 5 Press the Display Backlight button to cycle through the sensor serial numbers. 6 Press the Function button to select the sensor serial number of the sensor you want to pair with. The camera and sensor are paired when the Connected screen appears. You can check the connection status in the Info Sequence. The Holster icon means that you are paired. 7 Disconnect the sensor from the power supply. NOTE: When connected to a power supply, the sensor remains in pairing mode for one minute. After one minute, the sensor must be disconnected and reconnected to the power supply re-enabling pairing mode. 2.13.2 Holster Aware Status From the V700 menu for the firearm sensor, you can put the sensor into Safety Mode, which allows you to remove the firearm from the holster and not start a recording. Procedure:
1 Navigate to the Main Menu screen. 2 Press the Display Backlight button to search for sensors. 3 Press the Function button to enter the Sensor submenu. 4 Press the Display Backlight button to cycle to Safety Mode. 5 Press the Function button to put Holster Aware in Safety Mode On/Off. The V700 notifies you when the sensor battery level is low or critical. The notification repeats for every one percent drop in battery level until it reaches critical. The notifications remain on the screen for four seconds. When the camera reaches the critical battery level, the notification for it remains until you 46 acknowledge it and reoccurs every one percent drop. The warning stops when the battery is charged or dead. No notification appears for a normal battery level. For more information on the different sensor battery levels, see Sensor Battery Levels on page 47. MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.13.3 Sensor Battery Levels Table 7: Sensor Battery Levels Percentage Status Notifications Above 25%
Normal No notifications are sent. 25-21%
Low Notification is sent on the UI with vibe or tone feedback or both, depending on your configuration. It times out after five seconds or when you acknowledge it with a button press. It does not persist throughout the recording. Notifications are sent every 1% at 25% and below. At or below 20%
Critical A critical battery notification that persists on the screen until you press a button to acknowledge it. It also clears if a recording is started until the recording and tagging are complete. 2.14 V700 Docking Overview You can dock the V700 in the following bases:
WiFi Base (Dock the V700 in a WiFi Base on page 48) Transfer Station II (Dock the V700 in a Transfer Station II on page 49) USB Base (USB Dock and Upload on page 50) While docked, you can do the following:
Charge the battery Upgrade firmware for the V700 from Transfer Station II and WiFi Base Upload recorded events from Transfer Station II Upload recorded events from the WiFi Base Upload recorded events from the USB Base Define a Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) event Request a state capture from Transfer Station II for troubleshooting NOTE: The camera and battery can only dock in one direction in the bases. Do not remove the camera from the battery while it is charging. You can damage data or evidence on the camera. The camera can be paired with the WiFi Base to associate with other V300 or V700 cameras and the in-car video system to form a recording group (V700 in a Recording Group on page 37). 47 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift You can dock the V700 with the battery or dock the stand-alone battery in any available bases. You can use the WiFi Base or USB Base for incidental charging during your shift. IMPORTANT: Charging in a WiFi Base without the vehicle running can impact the vehicle battery and can slow charging in warmer temperatures. The battery may stop charging if the ambient temperature gets too hot (40 C / 104 F). NOTE: The V700 must interact with your agency evidence management system to be customized for your agency. 2.14.1 Dock the V700 in a WiFi Base You can dock the V700 in one direction only. The camera pairs with the WiFi Base and is associated with any other V700 that is paired with the same WiFi Base. When you dock the camera and battery in a WiFi Base that is connected to your agency evidence management system, the camera communicates to your agency evidence management system that it has recorded events to upload and the following occurs:
NOTE: The camera must be configured to upload events directly to your agency evidence management system from the WiFi Base. For more information, see your agency evidence management system documentation. Recorded events are uploaded to your agency evidence management system Your agency evidence management system sends commands and requests to the camera as applicable NOTE: Recorded events that have been uploaded are marked as upload confirmed. These events are immediately unprotected, making the storage space available to be reused. Stage a firmware upgrade
- After staging, the upgrade is immediately applied to the camera 48
- The camera checks every 30 minutes for a firmware upgrade The camera is ready for operation when you undock it from the WiFi Base. IMPORTANT: IP address 192.168.99.x is reserved for USB and WiFi Bases. MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift 2.14.2 Dock the V700 in a Transfer Station II IMPORTANT: You must first set up and configure the Transfer Station II. For more information, see the Transfer Station II Quick Start User Guide. When you dock the V700 and battery in a Transfer Station II, the following occurs:
The V700 stand-alone battery charges The V700 time and date synchronize with your agency evidence management system The V700 checks every 30 minutes for a firmware upgrade CAUTION: The V700 sets its internal date and time from your agency evidence management system. If the computer date and time is incorrect, the camera is set incorrectly, and your video evidence is marked with the incorrect date and time. Figure 9: Transfer Station II Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 Stand alone battery V700 camera and battery Slot ID Slot ID Individual slot power LEDs 49 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Item 6 Description Transfer Station II power LEDs NOTE: Slot ID stickers are included with Transfer Station II, if you choose to use them. The camera communicates to your agency evidence management system that it has recorded events ready to upload. The Transfer Station II can upload from eight cameras simultaneously. While docked, the camera performs the following actions:
Marks any imported recorded events as import confirmed Events confirmed as imported are immediately unprotected. This makes the storage space available to be reused. Updates the configuration Stages a firmware upgrade After staging, the upgrade is immediately applied to the camera. The WiFi Base firmware can be downloaded to the V700 while docked in the Transfer Station II When you undock the camera and battery from the Transfer Station II, they are ready for normal operation. 2.14.3 Periodic Configuration Updates If you have automatic updates enabled in your agency evidence management system, when docked, the V700 queries for configuration updates every 10 minutes. If it finds a change, it updates the configuration. 2.15 USB Dock and Upload You can dock your V700 in the USB Base to establish a connection to your agency evidence management system. The V700 can upload events when docked in the USB Base. 50 MN009878A01-B Chapter 2 : V700 During a Shift Docking the V700 in the USB Base enables the following actions:
Retrieves battery charging status USB upload requires you to check out the V700 from a Transfer Station II to provision it with the agency; this enables you to upload from the USB Base in the field. 2.15.1 Upgrading the V700 Firmware You can push new firmware upgrades to the V700 while it is docked in the Transfer Station II, WiFi Base, or USB Base, depending on your configuration. Procedure:
1 Dock the camera in a WiFi Base, USB Base, or Transfer Station II with access to your agency evidence management system. If an upgrade is needed, your agency evidence management system automatically notices and pushes the upgrade. NOTE: V700 checks your agency evidence management system every 30 minutes for firmware upgrades. 2 Keep the camera docked while upgrading. WARNING: Do not remove the camera from the dock while its new firmware is being applied. Removing the camera from the dock during the upgrade can cause the camera to malfunction. The camera cannot perform any other function while upgrading its firmware, including uploading a video. While the upgrade is being staged on the camera, the display shows DO NOT INTERRUPT under the upgrade bar, including Do not undock or Do not disturb above the bar. When the upgrade is finished applying, depending on your alert notification selections, the camera sounds the ready alert. You can safely undock the camera. 51 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Chapter 3 V700 Overview The Motorola Solutions V700 Body-Worn Camera serves as a Digital Video Recorder (DVR) to capture, process, and store video and audio evidence. You must connect the camera to the agency evidence management system to configure it and upload video for evidence management. The V700 works with other V300 or V700 cameras and the 4RE or M500 DVRs, if present, to form a recording group. For more information, see Recording Group Overview on page 37. If enabled, the V700 can live stream video and report location over LTE to CommandCentral Aware. For more information, see LTE Wireless Service on page 86. NOTE: V300 and V700 cameras cannot pair as part of a group with the VISTA cameras in the same car. You can combine the videos of V300, V700, VISTA Wi-Fi, and VISTA XLT video captures for the same event in your agency evidence management system. Camera Components The following are the components of the V700:
Dual microphones (Microphone on page 58) Display screen (V700 Display on page 54) The camera features the following buttons:
- Function (top) (Function Button on page 57)
- Display Backlight button (side) (Display Backlight Button on page 57)
- Record Start/Stop (front) (Record Start/Stop Button on page 58)
- Power (bottom) (Power Button on page 58) NOTE: For more information, see V700 Buttons on page 56. Top Status LED User-replaceable battery (V700 User-Replaceable Battery on page 58) Storage capacity for V700 is 24-36 hours at max resolution and frame rate Ultra-wide dynamic range image sensor that includes the following functions:
- Maintains rich colors at all light levels
Increases low-light sensitivity Images have less digital noise, and low-light performance is improved Captures a balanced image 3.1 V700 Key Features NOTE: This user guide covers the basic use of the V700. If you have a question that is not covered in the user guide, you can contact customer service. The V700 includes the following features:
LTE Wireless Service (If enabled) 52 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview A user-replaceable, standalone battery that allows 24-hour shifts with the same camera Bluetooth enabled Support for the Transfer Station II 2 MP image sensor that realizes high picture quality in the visible light regions Reduced fisheye effect Dual microphones Stores 24-36 hours of events with a maximum resolution and 30 frames per second with 128 GB of storage Works with other V700 and V300 cameras to form a recording group The V700 camera elevates data security with encryption at rest and in transit iOS and Android smartphone app iOS smart phone SmartControl app A rating of IP67 from the International Electrical Commission NOTE: This means that the camera can survive a drop into fresh water up to 1 meter (3 feet 3 inches) deep and for up to 30 minutes. Figure 10: V700 Components 3.2 V700 Configuration You can only create a V700 configuration in the agency evidence management system. Some of the configuration properties you can set up for the V700 include the following:
Agency or department name Time zone Officer name and badge ID Device ID 53 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Network preferences Officer preferences for indicators Recording group interaction Recording preferences Power and storage-saving preferences Event tags For more information, see your agency evidence management system documentation. 3.3 V700 Display The display on the V700 shows icons and messages to indicate the status of the camera. If a message is longer than the screen width, the message scrolls. The display is on the top of the camera. You can do and see the following on the display:
The Home screen When the camera is not recording an event, the default message shown on the display is the storage status for the SD card and battery. For more information, see Home Screen on page 56. Figure 11: Home Screen A default message shows on the display when the camera is in Covert Mode and not recording, and is the inverse of what was on the normal screen Shows the SD card storage icon and the percentage of battery remaining The V700 battery charge lasts up to 12 hours, depending on your configuration. When recording in HD format, V700 can store about 36 hours of maximum-resolution events or up to about 200 hours at low resolution Figure 12: SD Card and Battery A blinking circle in the center that indicates the V700 is recording You can cycle through the Info Sequence by pressing the Display Backlight button You can cycle through the Menu by pressing the Function button You can cycle through the Info Sequence, which takes you back to the starting screen, by pressing the Function button 54 Figure 13: Scrolling through the Info Sequence MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Table 8: Info Sequence Items Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 SD Storage Blinking circle indicates camera is recording Battery usage and percentage remaining Number of events on the camera Recording mode as part of a group. If not in a group it says None Shows what accessories V700 is connected to: 4RE, M500, APX Radio, and Holster Aware Percent of the Sensor for the Holster Aware that is available Bluetooth connected Device name and ID number 10 Officer assigned to 55 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview 3.3.1 Home Screen The Home screen on the V700 display can show a variety of icons. Figure 14: Home Screen Table 9: Home Screen Icons Item Description GPS Indicates that the GPS is active. Visibility On/Live Streaming Indicates that live streaming to CommandCentral Aware is occurring. Storage Indicates the storage capacity of the camera. Record The icon flashes to indicate that the camera is actively recording. When not recording the space is blank. Battery Indicates the battery level and percentage remaining. LTE Indicates LTE signal strength and connection to the agency evidence management system. 3.3.2 Clearing Error Messages If an error appears on the V700 display, the top LED flashes red to show an error condition. Procedure:
1 To acknowledge the error, press the Display Backlight button. For more information, see V700 Buttons on page 56. The LED may turn solid amber until the error is cleared by the camera. 2 Optional: If it does not clear on its own, reboot the camera. 3.4 V700 Buttons The V700 has four buttons:
Function Button on page 57 Display Backlight Button on page 57 Record Start/Stop Button on page 58 56 Power Button on page 58 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Table 10: V700 Buttons Item 1 2 3 4 Description Function button Display Backlight button Record Start/Stop button Power button 3.4.1 Function Button The Function button is on the top of the camera and controls the following functions:
Brings up the Menu screen Allowing you to select a category tag when tagging an event Sensors Device Info Enabling Covert Mode by pressing and holding the Function button 3.4.2 Display Backlight Button The Display Backlight button is on the right side as you look at the front of the camera. The screen backlight turns on when you power up the camera until it reaches the ready screen. The screen backlight turns on when you power off the camera and remains on until the camera powers off. You can use the Display Backlight button to perform the following functions:
Cycling through the Menu screens (see User Interface Menu Flow) Cycling through the Info Sequence screens (see User Interface Info Sequence) 57 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview The Display Backlight turns off about 8 seconds after going through all of the info screens Short pressing the Display Backlight button to cycle through the Info Sequence Long pressing the Display Backlight button to cycle back through the Info Sequence Toggling event tags when categorizing events The Record button interrupts the sequence Pressing and holding to mute the camera momentarily when recording 3.4.3 Record Start/Stop Button You can use the Record Start/Stop button to start or stop a recorded event and interrupt the info sequence. The Record Start/Stop button is on the front of the camera. For more information, see Start and Stop Recorded Events on page 31. 3.4.4 Power Button You can use the Power button to power the camera both on and off. The Power button is on the bottom of the camera battery. For more information, see Power On and Off on page 19 for more information. Figure 15: V700 Power On Button 3.5 Microphone The digital microphone records CD-quality sound. Depending on the configuration applied to the camera, the microphone continuously records audio, which is the default setting. 3.6 V700 User-Replaceable Battery With the user-replaceable battery, you can extend your shift by charging a replacement battery in the car. The V700 battery recharges to 100% in about four hours. The battery life depends upon the device configuration and LTE service. An audio chime plays, and the battery icon blinks when the battery gets close to a critical level. NOTE: These alarms depend on your officer preferences. Start watching the battery icon when it gets to 2%, and replace your battery once the battery icon gets to 1%. After the icon starts blinking, the display shows LOW BATTERY, and the camera starts a shutdown procedure. NOTE: You should keep an eye on the battery percentage. 58 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview You should shut down the camera before pulling the battery out. You can damage data by not shutting down the camera. Weather can affect the charging of the camera. Extreme hot or cold temperatures can shut down battery charging. The ambient temperature range for charging is 0 C / 32 F to 40 C / 104 F. At the lowest and highest temperatures, charging can stop. 3.6.1 V700 Battery Maintenance You may need to clean your battery and camera contacts if your camera shows any of the following signs:
Random rebooting or random power off (Random Reboot or Power Off on page 59) The battery percentage on the display abruptly reports 0% battery life remaining (Low Battery Percentage Report on page 59) The V700 does not power on or off outside of the dock (Unresponsive Power On or Off on page 59) 3.6.1.1 Random Reboot or Power Off The V700 powers off or reboots when docked or undocked or when other shock-type events occur. However, an abrupt reboot will cause the camera to initiate a System Recovery at the beginning of the next boot up. The recovery can take up to 10 minutes, depending on the amount of video recordings stored in the camera. Contamination on the battery or camera contacts can cause these symptoms. You can clean off the contamination by following the Cleaning the Battery and Camera on page 60 procedure. 3.6.1.2 Low Battery Percentage Report The V700 battery life indicator on the display can show 0% battery life remaining; this typically occurs at power on or when undocked from charging and upload station or base. On the display, Low Battery may show briefly. Contamination on the battery contacts can cause these symptoms. You can clean off the contamination by following the Cleaning the Battery and Camera on page 60 procedure. 3.6.1.3 Unresponsive Power On or Off The camera powers on when docked, but after it is removed from the dock, the power button may be unresponsive, or you may have to hold it for an extended period of time. 3.6.1.4 Battery and Camera Contamination Causes A contaminated battery and camera prevents good electrical connection, causing an intermittent connection to the battery. Contamination can encompass a variety of foreign materials, such as accumulated residue from surface disinfectants or sanitizers, dirt, fibers, liquids, food, and other non-
conductive material on the contact surfaces. 59 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview 3.6.1.5 Cleaning the Battery and Camera Follow this procedure on cleaning the battery and camera contact surfaces. Procedure:
1 Remove the battery from the camera. 2 Clean the battery and camera contacts with a fine tipped cotton swab and isopropyl alcohol
(rubbing alcohol) with at least a 70% alcohol concentration. NOTE: Never apply the alcohol directly to the battery or camera contacts in an uncontrolled manner. 3 Gently clean all of the contact surfaces to remove debris with the fine tipped cotton swab. IMPORTANT: Do not use bleach, solvents, or cleaning sprays to clean or disinfect your battery and camera contacts. 3.6.1.6 Repairing the Battery or Camera Process:
1 If cleaning the battery and camera contacts does not lead to full functionality, isolate the source by changing the battery with a working one. 2 If replacing the battery resolves the issue, re-clean the battery and camera contacts. 3 If re-cleaning does not resolve the issue, contact customer service to replace the battery at 1-800-605-6734. 4 If replacing the battery does not resolve the issue, re-clean the camera contacts. 5 If re-cleaning does not resolve the issue, contact customer service to replace the camera at 1-800-605-6734. See the Motorola Solutions Technical Notification (MTN), MTN-0134-20-NA issued 09/2020 at https://www.motorolasolutions.com/en_us/support/technical-notifications.html. 3.7 Feedback Indicators Apart from the display, the V700 can provide feedback on the status using the following:
Tones Vibration Red and green LEDs Vibration only Tone and vibration together No tone or vibration All of the feedback indicators are configurable in the agency evidence management system. You can set up the tones and vibration to alert with the following:
Tone only Tone and vibration together No tone or vibration 60 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview You can configure the brightness level of the LEDs or set them to adjust automatically depending on the time of day. If you choose this option, they are dimmed from 8:00 pm to 8:00 am. NOTE: If you place the camera in Covert Mode, there is no tone sound, and the LEDs do not light up. 3.8 Video, Audio, and Subtitle Evidence The V700 works as a DVR and camera combination to collect evidence in a recorded event. A recorded event is a unique, protected segment composed of the following:
Video Audio Subtitles Video The V700 records a single compressed video stream using h.264 high-profile compressions. Depending on the configuration applied to the camera, the video quality can be one of the following levels:
Lets you capture brilliant colors even when the video is taken against bright light for video imaging and still imaging High Definition (HD), 1080p, at a rate of 30 frames-per-second, 1920 by 1080 pixels High Definition (HD), 720p, at a rate of 30 frames-per-second, image resolution of 1280 by 720 pixels NOTE: The V700 lens sensor corrects image distortion. It reduces the fisheye effect from the wide-angle lens. Audio The V700 records CD-quality audio with dual microphones that give minimal distortion and diminished wind noise. Depending on the configuration applied to the camera, it may:
Continuously record audio Only record audio during recorded events Display MUTED on the display NOTE: RECORDING shows on the display in a smaller font. Alerts you according to your agency configuration NOTE: The alert type is configured in your agency evidence management system. Provides better audible feedback Subtitles Subtitles are the text information that can be overlaid on the video and can include the following:
Officer name Date and time Device ID 61 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Microphone on or off GPS location NOTICE: The subtitles are always included with the video and audio in a recorded event. Using your agency evidence management system, you can turn them off or on. For more information, see the following:
Record-After-the-Fact (RATF) on page 41 Pre-Event Capture on page 41 Assigning a Configuration and Checking Out on page 30 Event Upload on page 36 V700 in a Recording Group on page 37 3.9 Recording Reminder Alert The V700 notifies you regularly that it is still recording an event. You can configure the Recording Reminder Alert in the agency evidence management system to remind you periodically that V700 is recording an event. The reminders include the following:
Tone This tone sounds the same as the checkout tone. It sounds once and occurs at the interval set in the agency evidence management system configuration from 0 to 60 minutes. Vibrate Vibrate occurs at the interval set in the agency evidence management system configuration from 0 to 60 minutes. 3.10 Periodic Configuration Updates If automatic updates are enabled in the agency evidence management system, the V700 queries for configuration updates every 10 minutes when docked. If it finds a change, it updates the configuration. 3.11 Data and Video Encryption Support The V700 system supports data and video encryption at rest and in transit. The data on the SD card in the camera is not readable if removed. Also, you cannot write to it or erase it. To read the data on the SD card, you must contact customer support. NOTE: The evidence uploaded to the agency evidence management system is encrypted. Storage The V700 stores 24 to 36 hours of HD video at 1080 pixels. The camera uses a 128 GB SD card. When you need to free up storage space on the camera, you should upload recorded events from the camera to the agency evidence management system. For more information, see Event Upload on page 36. The V700 display shows a storage icon and percentage (10%) used for protected recorded events. As the camera records events and its storage fill, the storage icon fills up, and the percentage increases. 62 Figure 16: Camera and Battery Storage MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Table 11: Camera and Battery Storage Items Item Description 1 2 The storage percentage used of the SD card. The remaining battery storage percentage. Low Storage and Full Storage Messages When the camera is about 10 minutes away from running out of storage space, it alerts you with the following:
Two short tones and/or a vibration, depending on your alert configuration settings. Slow-blinking red LED and the storage used icon on the display. When the camera storage is full, it alerts you with an error condition alert, such as the following:
Fast-blinking red LED on the camera. Three short tones and/or a vibration, depending on your alert configuration settings. A FULL message on the display. WARNING: If storage completely fills, the camera stops recording the new video. 3.12 GPS The V700 includes a built-in Global Positioning System (GPS). V700 uses the GPS feature to apply the following:
NOTE: You can also track GPS through LTE. For more information, see Location over LTE. Accurate timestamps to recorded events. These timestamps allow the agency evidence management system to synchronize playback between events, video or audio, from V700 and a 4RE or M500 DVR. GPS location coordinates to the V700 recorded events. The fixed status, longitude, latitude, speed, and time of day information is sent to the metadata service each second to be included in the event data. The speed information is compared to the configured maximum speed to determine if the vehicle has exceeded the excessive speed trigger. If it has, a message is sent to the event service to determine if an event should be started. NOTE: The GPS feature can be disabled in your agency evidence management system configuration. 63 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview 3.13 WiFi Base When V700 is paired with the WiFi Base, the camera display shows a Wi-Fi Signal Strength icon (
that indicates the strength of the Wi-Fi signal coming from the WiFi Base.
) Example:
WiFi Base Connections The WiFi Base has connections for a Wi-Fi antenna cable and a provided custom power and data cable on the back. Setting up the WiFi Base Typically, the WiFi Base and V700 systems are installed in the vehicle by your agency installation technicians. For more information about installing the V700 system equipment in the vehicle, see the 4RE In-Car Video System Installation Guide or M500 In-Car Video System Installation Guide. 64 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Remote Upgrade WiFi Base The upgrade file for the WiFi Base downloads while the V700 is docked in the Transfer II Station. After you place the camera in the WiFi Base, the camera associates, and the power LED fast blinks amber while the upgrade is copied to the base. Afterward, the power LED slow blinks amber, signaling a pending upgrade. To apply the upgrade, you can power cycle the Wi-Fi base. 3.13.1 LED Icons The LEDs on the WiFi Base brightness depends on the time of day. The display dims from 8:00 pm to 8:00 am. Figure 17: Power LED Icons Table 12: Power LED Items Item 1 2 Description Network linking Charging Table 13: Power Led Indicators Status Transfer Station II WiFi Base USB Base Powered on standby Power LED green sol-
id Power LED green sol-
id Power LED green off Camera/Battery docked, charging Camera/Battery docked, finished charging Camera/Battery docked, charge error Power LED green blinks until 100%
charged Power LED green blinks until 100%
charged Power LED green blinks until 100%
charged Power LED green sol-
id Power LED green sol-
id Power LED green sol-
id Power LED red solid Power LED red blinks Power LED red blinks Associate success N/A Associate error N/A Power LED green blinks 3 times Power LED red blinks 3 times N/A N/A 65 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Status Error Base shutdown Base firmware up-
grade Base firmware up-
grade Pending Smart Power Switch firmware upgrade staged Smart Power Switch firmware upgrade pending Transfer Station II WiFi Base USB Base N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Power LED red blinks 1 second on, 1 sec off Power LED green blinks until off Power LED amber blinks 250 millisec-
onds (ms) on, 250 ms off Power LED amber blinks 500 ms on, 500 ms off Power LED amber blinks 1 sec on, 1 sec off Power LED red blinks N/A N/A N/A N/A Power LED amber off N/A Activity LED Indicators Table 14: Activity LED Indicators Status Transfer Station II WiFi Base Wireless connected, if no camera docked N/A Wireless disconnected N/A Activity LED green WiFi LED blinks with WiFi Activity Activity LED green WiFi LED off Camera docked Activity LED amber solid Activity LED green WiFi LED off Backend server connected, if camera docked Activity LED green solid Activity LED amber solid Upload LED green solid Upload in progress, if cam-
era docked Activity LED green blinks Activity LED amber blinks Network upload activity on Ethernet interface Backend server disconnect-
ed or Error, if camera docked Activity LED red Activity LED off Upload LED off USB Base N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Transfer Station II Front LED Indicators Table 15: Transfer Station II Front LED Indicators Status Power good 66 Transfer Station II Main Power LED green solid MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview Status Power fail Backend server connected, transfer station link detected Transfer Station II Main Power LED red solid LED amber green Backend server not connected, transfer station link not detected Link LED off No MAC Address Main Power LED red blinks 3.13.2 WiFi Base LEDs The two LEDs on the front of the WiFi Base show the power connection status. The LEDs are light-sensitive and adjust to the ambient light. Figure 18: LEDs on the WiFi Base NOTE: When V700 pairs with the WiFi Base, the camera display shows a Wi-Fi signal strength icon (
) that indicates the strength of the Wi-Fi signal coming from the WiFi Base. Table 16: LEDs on the WiFi Base Items Item Description 1 2 Network linking indicator Charge indicator Table 17: LED and WiFi Base Status LED No light Red Red Red Green Green State WiFi Base status Solid Blinking Blinking Solid Blinking Powered off Charge error Error condition
, pairing not successful Error condition Fully charged In the shutdown or wireless upload timeout peri-
od 67 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview The left LED on the WiFi Base blinks green when it successfully pairs with a V700. The LED blinks red if the pairing was not successful. NOTE: If you get a solid red light, try undocking and redocking your camera and battery. If solid red appears repeatably, you should contact customer service. Table 18: Network Activity LED LED state State WiFi Base state Off Amber Amber Green Green Connected to the Distributed Multi-Peer Re-
cording upload server (agency evidence man-
agement system) Not connected to the camera or upload server
(agency evidence management system) Activity with the upload server (agency evi-
dence management system) Connected to the camera (Wi-Fi connection) Activity with the camera (Wi-Fi connection) Solid Blinking Solid Blinking If two cameras pair with the same WiFi Base, and one is docked, the WiFi Base LEDs show the state of the docked camera. 3.13.3 WiFi Base Firmware Upgrade The V700 Camera automatically pulls firmware upgrades for the WiFi base from your agency evidence management system when the V700 is docked in a Transfer Station II. NOTE: Your agency evidence management system can be set up to push new firmware automatically. For instructions, see your agency evidence management system documentation. The camera checks every 30 minutes if a new firmware upgrade is available. 3.13.3.1 Upgrading WiFi Base Procedure:
1 Dock the V700 in the Transfer Station II. 2 Upload events. a If an upgrade is available, your agency evidence management system pushes the firmware upgrade after the video upload completes. 3 Remove the V700 and dock it in the WiFi Base. The base upgrade occurs automatically. a The amber LED blinks quickly. b When the upgrade is complete the amber LED blinks slowly. 4 Power cycle the in-car system so that the upgrade will take effect immediately. NOTE: If you undock the camera before the upgrade is complete, the camera downloads the upgrade the next time the camera is docked. The upgrade does not take effect until the download is complete and the in-car system powers up. 68 MN009878A01-B Chapter 3 : V700 Overview If the camera is undocked after the upgrade and then quickly redocked, the amber LED no longer shows. If the upgrade is already complete, no upgrade occurs. Return to step 4. If the ignition is turned off, without completing the upgrade, the next time the camera is docked, the upgrade process begins again 69 MN009878A01-B Chapter 4 : V700 Connection with CommandCentral Aware Chapter 4 V700 Connection with CommandCentral Aware Your agency can configure V700 Body-Worn Cameras to connect wirelessly with CommandCentral Aware (CC Aware). The connection allows dispatch or Command staff to watch and listen to live streams and view your GPS location in real time from V700 in CC Aware. For more information on how to live stream and share your location to CC Aware from V700, see the following sections:
Live Streaming over LTE to CommandCentral Aware on page 70 Location Sharing over LTE to CommandCentral Aware on page 71 The following table describes the different icons that can appear on the V700 display when the camera is connecting to CC Aware:
Table 19: V700 CommandCentral Aware Icons Icon Description Visibility On/Live Streaming Indicates that live streaming to CC Aware is occurring. For more informa-
tion, see Live Streaming over LTE to CommandCentral Aware on page 70. GPS Indicates that the GPS is active. For more information, see GPS on page 63 and Location Sharing over LTE to CommandCentral Aware on page 71. Record Indicates that the camera is recording and live streaming to CC Aware. For more information, see Starting a Recorded Event Manually on page 31 and Live Streaming over LTE to CommandCentral Aware on page 70. LTE (on a dark background) Indicates that the camera has an active LTE connection and is connected to your agency evidence management system. For more information, see LTE Wireless Service on page 86 and LTE Service Icons on page 86. 4.1 Live Streaming over LTE to CommandCentral Aware Prerequisites: For V700 to live stream to CommandCentral Aware (CC Aware), your agency must configure this feature in the agency evidence management system, and your V700 must have a direct connection to a wireless LTE carrier service. NOTE: Your agency must have the proper license to use this feature. 70 MN009878A01-B Chapter 4 : V700 Connection with CommandCentral Aware Procedure:
1 Power on V700 by following the procedure in Powering On on page 19. 2 To verify that the V700 has a connection to an LTE service and the agency evidence management system, ensure that the 4G icon appears on the display. For more information on the service icons for LTE, see LTE Service Icons on page 86. NOTE: If you do not have an active connection to the agency evidence management system, the V700 does not live stream to CC Aware. 3 Start a recording on V700 by following the procedure in Starting a Recorded Event Manually on page 31. The following occurs:
The record icon appears on the display to confirm that you are recording. The visibility on icon appears on the display to confirm that you are live streaming to CC Aware. V700 broadcasts to CC Aware that you are live streaming, where dispatch or Command staff can watch and listen to real-time recordings from V700. 4 Optional: To stop live streaming to CC Aware, stop the recording by following the procedure in Stopping a Recorded Event Manually on page 32. 4.2 Location Sharing over LTE to CommandCentral Aware Prerequisites: To share your location from V700 to CommandCentral (CC Aware), your agency must configure this feature in the agency evidence management system, and your V700 must have a direct connection to a wireless LTE carrier service. NOTE: Your agency must have the proper license to use this feature. Procedure:
1 Power on V700 by following the procedure in Powering On on page 19. 2 To verify that the V700 has a connection to an LTE service and the agency evidence management system, ensure that the 4G icon appears on the display. For more information on the service icons for LTE, see LTE Service Icons on page 86. NOTE: If you do not have an active connection to the agency evidence management system, the V700 does not share your location with CC Aware. 3 To verify that your GPS location is active, ensure that the GPS icon appears on the display. Your location appears on CC Aware, where dispatch or Command staff can view and monitor your location in real-time. NOTE: When the V700 is turned On and idel, it sends location updates to CC Aware every 1 minute. When the V700 is activity recording, location updates are sent to CC Aware every 15 seconds. 71 MN009878A01-B Chapter 4 : V700 Connection with CommandCentral Aware 4 Optional: To stop sharing your location to CC Aware, turn off V700 by following the procedure in Powering Off on page 19. 72 MN009878A01-B SmartControl for Mobile Chapter 5 SmartControl for Mobile SmartControl runs on any Android phone running Android 6 or higher and on any iPhone running iOS 12 or higher. NOTE: If you are using an iPhone, you must enable Maximum Compatibility mode. For more information, see https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203302. 5.1 SmartControl Overview SmartControl is the companion smartphone application for the V700 Body-Worn Camera, allowing officers to view evidence and tag videos on their phone or tablet. SmartControl works in both portrait and landscape mode, making it convenient to use on tablets. SmartControl connects wirelessly to V700, in which the camera acts as an 802.11n Wi-Fi access point
(hotspot) for the smartphone. The SmartControl application gives you the capability to perform the following functionalities:
Table 20: SmartControl Functionalities Review recorded events Set Officer Preferences Categorize recorded events Live stream video Add secondary tags Start and Stop a recording Start and stop recorded events Enter and exit Covert Mode Adjust camera LEDs Enter and exit Covert Mode IMPORTANT: IP address 192.168.98.x is reserved for SmartControl. 5.1.1 Downloading the SmartControl App Procedure:
1 To download the SmartControl app on an Android device, perform the following actions:
a On the device, go to the Google Play Store. b Search for SmartControl for Android. The SmartControl app icon for Android appears for you to download. Figure 19: SmartControl App for Android 73 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile 2 To download the SmartControl app on an iOS device, perform the following actions:
a On the device, go to the Apple App Store. b Search for Motorola Solutions SmartControl for iOS. The SmartControl app icon for iOS appears for you to download. Figure 20: SmartControl App for iPhone or iPad 5.2 SmartControl Enablement For SmartControl to operate properly, based on the device type, it requires you to enable Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or GPS services when you first launch the application. Android For Android, it requires you to enable Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS services. Figure 21: Android Services Enablement 74 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile Table 21: SmartControl Services Enablement Items Item Description 1 2 3 4 SmartControl wants to turn on WiFi. You must select ALLOW to enable the service. SmartControl wants to turn on Bluetooth. You must select ALLOW to enable this service. Allow SmartControl to access this device's location. You must select ALLOW to enable this service. If you decline, the location access a second time. Selecting Try Again does not work. You have to reset location access outside the app in your device. To continue turn on device location, which uses Google Location service, you must select OK. If you encounter SmartControl connection issues on your Android device, see Troubleshooting Android Connection Setting Issues on page 76. iOS For iOS, it requires you to enable only Wi-Fi and Bluetooth services. Figure 22: iOS Services Enablement Table 22: iOS Services Enablement Items Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Connection Issues: the application requires Bluetooth and WiFi to connect to the camera Open Settings You turned off connection settings outside of the app Connection Issue: app requires Bluetooth and WiFi Open Settings and turn on Bluetooth and WiFi Let's Get Started: press the highlighted buttons at the same time on the camera and hold for 5 seconds to connect to the app Press the Connect button 75 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile Item Description 8 9 When you return to the app, the screen auto-refreshes Connect the new device If you encounter SmartControl connection issues on your iOS device, see Troubleshooting iPhone Connection Setting Issues on page 76. 5.2.1 Troubleshooting Android Connection Setting Issues SmartControl does not work if you close it or turn off connection settings outside of the application. To troubleshoot the connection problem, you can either select Close app or Try again. When and where to use:
You can use any of the following methods in this procedure to connect with SmartControl. Procedure:
1 To try relaunch the app, use Try Again. 2 Close the application and enable the Wi-Fi and GPS directly through Android. 3 Close the application and relaunch it. NOTE: Closing the application and reopening it does not reinstate the connections. 5.2.2 Troubleshooting iPhone Connection Setting Issues SmartControl needs both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth services to get started. SmartControl does not work if you closed it or turned off connection settings outside of the application. Procedure:
1 Open Settings and enable Bluetooth and Wi-Fi directly through iOS. NOTE: Closing or restarting the application and reopening it does not reinstate the connections. 5.3 Connecting SmartControl to aV700 You must check out your V700 from your agency evidence management system to connect the camera to SmartControl, depending on your agency configuration. IMPORTANT: SmartControl runs on any smartphone running Android 6 or higher and iOS 12 or higher. To activate press the Function (top) button and the Display Backlight button on the camera at the same time and hold for 5 seconds 76 Figure 23: Connecting to the V700 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile Item Description 1 2 3 4 All previous device pairing information clears when you start the process. Any events in memory will still be on the camera. SmartControl is searching for a camera to connect to. It only takes a few seconds to search for the connection. (Searching times out after 30 seconds. Try again if this happens.) The app finds any close camera. Check the screen on the V700 UI for your camera name. Touch the area with the camera ID on the screen to select your camera. Enter the Pin number shown on the V700 on the line provided for the Bluetooth pairing in SmartControl. The Samsung A10s running Android 10 and Sony Xperia L4 device running Android 9 may have trouble pairing with SmartControl. It does not recognize the ID number and responds as invalid pin. Try it again and it should work. 77 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile 5.4 SmartControl Settings Settings allows you to set Officer Preferences. Figure 24: Officer Preferences and Device Connection Set Officer Preferences
- Covert Mode: setting this depends on your agency configuration
- Brightness
- Auto Reduce Brightness
- Audio
- Vibrate on Alert See the state of your device connections Disconnect from device (V700) Scrollable below Disconnect from Device, (not shown):
- Customer support phone number
- Customer support website link
- About SmartControl
- About Connected Device 78 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile 5.5 Accessing Settings When Not Connected You can view the settings screen when you are not connected to the app. You can see that Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are disconnected. You can also see how to contact Customer support. You have to update the settings outside of the app. Procedure:
Tap the settings (1) button at the top right of the app to access the settings screen (2). Information about your application appears. The Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are disconnected and some settings are grayed out because you are not connected to the V700. The Customer support contact information is shown. 79 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile 5.6 iOS Previously Connected Device Connection Issue If there is an issue connecting to a previously connected device, press the camera buttons and start the search for the camera. Figure 25: iOS previously Connected Device Connection Issue If the app says that it cannot connect to this device, there is an issue connecting to the camera. To resolve the issue:
Description Select Settings Navigate to Bluetooth settings. Ensure that it is on Select the device name Select Forget this device After all the steps are complete, return to the beginning and try again Item 1 2 3 4 5 80 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile 5.7 Setting SmartControl Officer Preferences Tap the Settings icon to access the SmartControl Officer Preferences in the DEVICE CONTROL screen. Figure 26: Setting Officer Preferences Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 6 Settings icon. Tap to bring up the settings. Turn Covert Mode on or off Set the Brightness of your screen Sets Brightness to dim from 8 pm to 8 am, based on the time on your V700 Set the volume of your tones Turn Vibrate on Alert on or off 5.8 Categorizing an Event Use the SmartControl app to categorize a recorded event on your smartphone. After you stop recording on the V700, you can categorize an event. Category tagging is accessible from the recorded events screen. 81 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile You can categorize an event immediately after stopping a recording. You can also categorize an event by selecting an event from a recorded events screen. Figure 27: Categorizing an Event 82 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 Goes back to the previous screen Done goes to the events screen If there is more than one event, the back arrow goes to the previous event screen. If there is more than one event, the forward arrow goes to the next event screen. Fields with a default value will show that default value. For tagging after a recording is stopped, the Recording complete event-tagging screen appears automatically. Figure 28: Automatic Tagging on Recording Stop 83 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile Item Description 1 2 3 4 5 Select a category tag (set by your agency) Select a value The tag is synchronized with V700 Tag synchronization is successful Tapping Done takes you back to the recorded events screen 5.9 Streaming Live Video You can use the live view on the smartphone to do the following tasks:
Item Description 1 2 3 View the live video stream from the V700 and Start an event Turn On or Off Covert Mode View the live video stream from the V700 and Stop the event 5.10 V700 Low Battery From anywhere in the SmartControl app, when the V700 battery reaches 10% or lower, the app interrupts with a warning. If you select STAY CONNECTED, the phone returns to the previous screen. If the V700 reaches a certain level, it shuts down automatically. You can select DISCONNECT FROM DEVICE and insert a new battery into the camera. Then you go through the start up procedure again.
(See Connecting SmartControl to aV700 on page 76.) Disconnecting from the camera makes the device last longer. You can also disconnect later through settings. 84 MN009878A01-B Chapter 5 : SmartControl for Mobile 5.11 Starting a State Capture You can request that your V700 perform a state capture and save it to the V700 for use by Motorola Solutions technical services. To start a state capture:
tem Description 1 2 3 Tap About Connected Device Tap Perform state capture The State capture initialized message appears Figure 29: Performing a State Capture 85 MN009878A01-B Chapter 6 : LTE Wireless Service Chapter 6 LTE Wireless Service The V700 body-worn camera is equipped with an internal LTE modem and wireless carrier SIM card from Verizon, AT&T/FirstNet or Bell Mobility (in Canada). The LTE service is not active by default. To activate LTE service, please contact your carrier of choice. The internal modem IMEI and SIM card ICCID are listed on the packaging box label of the camera and the QR Code on the back housing label of the camera. After the LTE service is activated, it will be active when the camera is turned on and not docked in a Transfer Station, USB Base, or WiFi Base. The V700 automatically connects to the provisioned wireless carrier network. Connectivity and roaming on available carrier networks are controlled automatically by V700 and do not require user intervention. The user does not have access to disable the LTE modem operation. The modem remains idle when not in use. NOTE: If LTE signal level is below 50%, the V700 will suspend automatic upload and cancel manual upload. When the signal is back above 50%, automatic upload will restart and manual upload has to be restarted manually through the menu. NOTE: For specific models, the LTE service may be disabled (airplane mode) by default, but GPS location coordinates logging into video recordings is still available. 6.1 LTE Service Icons Different indicators can appear on the V700 display to convey the status of your LTE service. Table 23: LTE Service Icons Indicator Description When LTE service is enabled, the 4G icon is displayed in the bottom right corner of the cam-
era screen. When the V700 camera is regis-
tered and connected to a wireless carrier net-
work, the 4G icon bars represent the signal strength of the network reception. When the V700 camera is not connected to a network or searching for a network, an X is shown under the 4G signal strength. When the V700 camera is connected to your agency evidence management system and is available to send location updates, stream live video, or upload video recordings, a dark square appears around the 4G signal strength icon. When V700 has a low 4G reception, the LTE SIGNAL WEAK message appears on the dis-
play of the camera. The message only appears when the 4G reception is lower than 50%. Once the message appears, it stops the in-progress 86 MN009878A01-B Chapter 6 : LTE Wireless Service Indicator Description automatic upload and cancels the manual up-
load, and you cannot begin a new upload until your 4G reception is higher than 59%. 6.2 LTE Automatic Uploads Agencies can configure V700 cameras to automatically upload events over LTE to the agency evidence management system as soon as they are recorded and tagged without docking the camera. NOTE: The power source of V700 is a removable battery that is easy to replace to allow continuous operation with minimal disruption. If the V700 battery level drops below 10%, the automatic upload is paused until the battery is charged to at least 10% or more or another charged battery is attached. NOTE: If the LTE signal is below 50%, the LTE upload will suspend automatic uploads and cancel manual uploads. When the LTE signal reaches above 50% again, automatic upload will resume. Manual upload must be resumed manually through the menu. See The following upload configurations are supported:
Table 24: Event Upload Configurations Item Description Upload All Events When configured, all critical and regular events are uploaded. Upload Critical Events Only When configured, only critical events are uploaded. All other events remain on the camera until docked. 6.2.1 Uploading Events Automatically over LTE Prerequisites: For V700 to automatically upload, undock from the WiFi Base, the camera must have an active connection to an LTE service and the agency evidence management system. If there is no connectivity, the event automatically uploads as soon as there is a connection to both LTE and the agency evidence management system. Check if the connection. icon appears on the display to verify the Procedure:
1 Start a recording on V700 by following the procedure in Starting a Recorded Event Manually on page 31. 2 When you are finished, stop the recording by following the procedure in Stopping a Recorded Event Manually on page 32. NOTE: Uploading stops if you press the Record Start/Stop button and start a new recording. After you stop and tag the new event, the camera begins the uploading process again. 3 Tag the event by following the procedure in Categorizing a Recorded Event on page 32. NOTE: If you do not tag the event in time, the event uploads with an uncategorized tag. The following results occur:
87 MN009878A01-B Chapter 6 : LTE Wireless Service The upload icon LTE has begun. appears on the display, indicating that the automatic upload over After the upload is complete, the checkmark icon appears on the display to confirm that the agency evidence management system has received the event. 4 Optional: Log onto your agency evidence management system to locate and play back the recorded event that uploaded over LTE. 6.3 Uploading Events Manually over LTE You can upload events manually to the agency evidence management system over LTE through the V700 Menu in the camera. To manually upload events over LTE, your agency must configure this feature for V700 cameras in the agency evidence management system. Procedure:
1 To enter Menu Mode, press the Function button. 2 To cycle to the Upload Menu category, press the Display Backlight button. 3 To enter the Upload Submenu, on the Upload Menu item, press the Function button. One of the following results occurs:
If the device is not in an uploading session and depending on the configuration of the camera, V700 displays All Events or Critical Events. If the camera is in an uploading session, V700 displays Cancel Upload. The cancel upload icon progress and disappears after the cancellation is complete. appears on the home screen while the cancellation is in If there are no events to upload, V700 displays No Events or No Criticals. If the device is connected to SmartControl, V700 displays App Blocking. 4 To start the manual upload, select either All Events or Critical Events. NOTE: You can cancel an event upload that is in progress. All events that are uploaded before pressing the Cancel Upload button remain uploaded and flagged for aging. After the upload is complete, you receive a confirmation message. 88
1 2 3 | Label | ID Label/Location Info | 165.43 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
Applicant: Motorola Solutions Inc FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 / 109U-99FT7164 EXHIBIT 1 IDENTIFICATION LABEL
(Pursuant to FCC Part 2.1033(c)(11), 2.1033(b)(7) and RSP 100 Annex C and Sec 3) LOCATION See the Attached Photograph or Sketch ____ ____ Bottom of the device ____ Front of the device _ __ Back of the device ____ Back of the device under Belt Clip _ X_ ____ Electronic labeling: In the user manual (Section: XX) In the Battery Compartment TYPE X __ The label base material is 0.0635 thick Brady B8117 black Poyester with 0.0254 thick acrylic adhesive The label is an electronic print accessible in the device. MARKINGS (TEXT) X See the Attached Photograph and Exhibit 3 for the actual location of the FCC/IC label on the device. X Label Attached Below. See Attached Drawing. EXHIBIT 1 Revision 2 (12 Jan 2023) SHEET 1 OF 5 Applicant: Motorola Solutions Inc FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 / 109U-99FT7164 V700 MODEL: WGA00725 __ASSEMBLED IN USA___ BWL7-000725 FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 QSG Restricted to occupational use to satisfy FCC RF exposure limits. See user manual for operating requirements. Figure 1: FCC Labels for WGA00725 V700 MODEL: WGA00735 __ASSEMBLED IN USA___ BWL7-000735 FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 QSG Restricted to occupational use to satisfy FCC RF exposure limits. See user manual for operating requirements. Figure 2: FCC Labels for WGA00735 EXHIBIT 1 Revision 2 (12 Jan 2023) SHEET 2 OF 5 Applicant: Motorola Solutions Inc FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 / 109U-99FT7164 V700 MODEL: WGA00745 __ASSEMBLED IN USA___ BWL7-000745 IC: 109U-99FT7164 QSG Restricted to occupational use to satisfy FCC RF exposure limits. See user manual for operating requirements. Figure 3: IC Label for WGA00745 V700 MODEL: WGA00755 __ASSEMBLED IN USA___ BWL7-000755 FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 IC: 109U-99FT7164 QSG Restricted to occupational use to satisfy FCC RF exposure limits. See user manual for operating requirements. Figure 4: FCC/IC Labels for WGA00755 EXHIBIT 1 Revision 2 (12 Jan 2023) SHEET 3 OF 5 Applicant: Motorola Solutions Inc FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 / 109U-99FT7164 V700 MODEL: WGA00825 __ASSEMBLED IN USA___ BWL7-000825 IC: 109U-99FT7164 QSG Restricted to occupational use to satisfy FCC RF exposure limits. See user manual for operating requirements. Figure 5: IC Label for WGA00825 V700 MODEL: WGA00925 __ASSEMBLED IN USA___ BWL7-000925 FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 QSG Restricted to occupational use to satisfy FCC RF exposure limits. See user manual for operating requirements. Figure 6: FCC Labels for WGA00925 EXHIBIT 1 Revision 2 (12 Jan 2023) SHEET 4 OF 5 Applicant: Motorola Solutions Inc FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 / 109U-99FT7164 V700 MODEL: WGA01025 __ASSEMBLED IN USA___ BWL7-001025 FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 QSG Restricted to occupational use to satisfy FCC RF exposure limits. See user manual for operating requirements. Figure 7: FCC Labels for WGA01025
*** END ***
EXHIBIT 1 Revision 2 (12 Jan 2023) SHEET 5 OF 5
1 2 3 | Attestation Bands Declaration (Module) | Attestation Statements | 110.00 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
Bands Declaration To whom it may concern, This product with FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 / IC: 109U-99FT7164 contains a FCC/ISED approved module (FCC ID: N7NRC76B / IC: 2417C-RC76B) and (FCC ID: VPYLB1DX / IC: 772C-LB1DX) . This approved module offers the bands and technologies listed below. Approved Module
(FCC ID: VPYLB1DX /
IC: 772C-LB1DX) BT 4.0 EDR 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n Bluetooth WIFI 2.4 GHz Approved Module
(FCC ID: N7NRC76B /
IC: 2417C-RC76B) NA NA B2, B4, B5, B12, B13, B14, B25, B26, B66, B71 LTE NA Product certification
(FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 /
IC: 109U-99FT7164) BT 4.0 EDR 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n B2, B4, B5, B12, B13, B14, B25, B66 There are bands and technologies in the approved module that will not be offered to this product for certification and will be disabled via software. The software to enable cannot be accessed by the end user. No other changes (such as power increase, duty cycle or hardware) were done to the module installed on this product for certification. Sincerely yours,
Name: Gaby Bitton Title: Engineering Manager Tel:972-537549389 E-mail:gabybitton@motorolasolutions.com Date: May 29, 2023 EXHIBIT 2c Revision 1 (2 Feb 2023) SHEET 1 OF 1
1 2 3 | Attestation Statements Part 2.911(d)(7) | Attestation Statements | 445.70 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Date: June 19, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch Federal Communications Commission Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Attestation Statements pursuant to Part 2.911 (d)(7) with FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir/Madam, This letter is to confirm that Motorolas Solutions Inc has a US Representative on behalf of for all future FCC certification/registrations. As the FCC Representative, we are aware of the requirements involved as outlined in US applicable document (FCC 22-84 and KDB 986446). US Representative Company Name: Motorola Solutions FRN Number: 0003778479 Company Grantee Code: AZ4 Contact Name: Deanna Zakharia Address: 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 Telephone Number: (954) 723-4707 E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com Applicant Company Name: Motorola Solutions Company Grantee Code: AZ4 Contact Name: Deanna Zakharia Address: 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 Telephone Number: (954) 723-4707 Sincerely, ____________________ Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13f Revision 2 (24 Februray 2023)
1 2 3 | Attstn Stmt Part 2.911(d)(5)(i)&(ii) | Attestation Statements | 462.50 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Date: June 21, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch Federal Communications Commission Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Attestation Statements pursuant to Part 2.911 (d)(5)(i) with FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir/Madam, According to FCC 22-84 and KDB 986446, Motorola Solutions, Inc (8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida) certifies that the equipment for which authorization is sought is not covered equipment prohibited from receiving an equipment authorization pursuant to section 2.903 of the FCC rules. Sincerely, ____________________ Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13e Revision 1 (30 Jan 2023) FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Date: June 21, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch Federal Communications Commission Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Attestation Statements pursuant to Part 2.911 (d)(5)(ii) with FCC ID AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir/Madam, According to FCC 22-84 and KDB 986446, Motorola Solutions, Inc (8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida) certifies that as of the date of the filing of the application, the applicant is not identified on the Covered List as an entity producing covered equipment. Sincerely, ____________________ Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13e Revision 1 (30 Jan 2023)
1 2 3 | Authorization Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 106.76 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
Certification Department Timco Engineering, Inc 849 NW State Road 45 Newberry, FL 32669 USA Date: June 21, 2023 Subject: Authorization for FCC and IC filing To Whom It May Concern:
I hereby authorize Gaby Bitton and Navaid Karimi to sign Ex02b (Attestation BT_WLAN Declaration doc) and Ex02c (Attestation-Bands Declaration doc), on my behalf, for the following FCC and IC:
FCC ID:
IC:
AZ499FT7164 109U-99FT7164 Please contact me if there are any questions or issues. Regards, Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager Tel: (954) 723 4707 Email: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com ____________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc, 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322
1 2 3 | Confidentiality Request Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 98.02 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
CONFIDENTIALITY REQUEST FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 June19, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch FCC Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Confidentiality Request for Transmitter with FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir / Madam, Motorola Solutions Inc is requesting that Exhibit 4 (Circuit Descriptions), Exhibit 5 (Schematic Diagrams), Exhibit 10 (Parts List and Tune Up Procedures), and Exhibit 12 (Operational Description) not be made routinely available for public inspection. Motorola Solutions Inc considers the information in these exhibits to be classified as trade secrets, pursuant to 47 CFR Section 0.457(d), 0.459 and Section 552(b)(4) of the Freedom of Information Act. Please mark Exhibits 4, 5, 10, and 12 as Confidential. Please contact me if you require any additional information. Sincerely, ____________________ Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13b(i) Revision 1 (2 Aug 2022)
1 2 3 | Cover Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 467.54 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Date: June 19, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch Federal Communications Commission Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Application for New Filing Certification of Transmitter with FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir/Madam, Motorola Solutions, Inc (8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida) herein submits application for Certification of the subject transmitter. Transmitter is intended for use in a Body Worn Camera with capabilities for clear and coded communications with a variable transmit power operating within the following frequency ranges:
Product Name Model Numbers Frequency Range RF Power FCC Rules Part V700 WGA00725 WGA00735 WGA00755 WGA00925 WGA01025 LTE B2 1850 - 1910 MHz LTE B4 1710 - 1755 MHz LTE B5 824 - 849 MHz LTE B12 699-716 MHz LTE B13 777-787 MHz LTE B14 788-798 MHz LTE B25 1850 - 1915 MHz LTE B66 1710 1780 MHz BT: 2402-2480 MHz BTLE 4.0: 2402-2480MHz WLAN 802.11 b/g/n: 2412-2462 MHz 196.78mW (EIRP max measured) 170.21mW (EIRP max measured) 64.12mW (EIRP max measured) 62.51mW (EIRP max measured) 90.78mW (EIRP max measured) 94.62mW (EIRP max measured) 215.27mW (EIRP max measured 170.61mW (EIRP max measured) 4.9mW (max measured conducted peak) 2.11mW (max measured conducted peak) 40.73mW (max measured conducted average) 24E 27 22H 27 27 90R 24E 27L 15C 15C 15C We are requesting certification under Part(s) of the Commissions Rules listed above to allow operation of this equipment. A complete Certification application is enclosed. If you require any additional information, please contact me at
(954) 723-4707 Sincerely, ____________________ Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13A Revision 3 (1 Dec 2022)
1 2 3 | Moto Sol Third-party Murata Conf. Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 454.12 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Applicant Confidentiality Letter Date: June 27, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch Federal Communications Commission Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Confidentiality Request for Exhibits under FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir/Madam, Pursuant of Section 0.457 and 0.459 of the Commissions Rules and KDB 726920 D01 Confidentiality Request Procedures, we hereby request that the exhibits listed below, submitted in support of the certification application for FCC ID: AZ499FT7164, be withheld permanently from public disclosure. Exhibit Type Schematics Block Diagram Parts List_Tune Up Operational Description File Name 99FT7164_Ex05_Schematic (Rev3-23May2023) 99FT7164_Ex04_Block_Diagram (Rev8-24May2023) 99FT7164_Ex10_Partlist_Tune_up (Rev9-27Jun23) 99FT7164_Ex12_Operational_Descriptions (Rev12-15June2023).pdf This request includes third party confidentiality for items not allowed to be accessed by Motorola Solutions Inc. The below third party and its confidentiality documents are listed as below:
Documents only accessible by Murata:
Exhibit Type Schematics Block Diagram Operational Description File Name 1DX_circuit diagram.pdf type1dx.pdf Operational Description Murata_1518 556 1DX 20160324 BV Proposal_re.pdf The above materials contain trade secrets and proprietary information not customarily released to the public. The public disclosure of these materials may be harmful to the applicant and provide unjustified benefits to its competitors. The applicant understands that pursuant to Section 0.457 of the Rules, disclosure of this application and all accompanying documentation will not be made before the date of the Grant for this application. Sincerely, ____________________ Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13g Revision 1 (2 Feb 2023)
1 2 3 | Moto Sol Third-party Sierra Wireless Conf. Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 454.06 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Applicant Confidentiality Letter Date: June 27, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch Federal Communications Commission Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Confidentiality Request for Exhibits under FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir/Madam, Pursuant of Section 0.457 and 0.459 of the Commissions Rules and KDB 726920 D01 Confidentiality Request Procedures, we hereby request that the exhibits listed below, submitted in support of the certification application for FCC ID: AZ499FT7164, be withheld permanently from public disclosure. Exhibit Type Schematics Block Diagram Parts List_Tune Up Operational Description File Name 99FT7164_Ex05_Schematic (Rev3-23May2023) 99FT7164_Ex04_Block_Diagram (Rev8-24May2023) 99FT7164_Ex10_Partlist_Tune_up (Rev9-27Jun23) 99FT7164_Ex12_Operational_Descriptions (Rev12-15June2023).pdf This request includes third party confidentiality for items not allowed to be accessed by Motorola Solutions Inc. The below third party and its confidentiality documents are listed as below:
Documents only accessible by Sierra Wireless:
Exhibit Type Schematics Block Diagram Operational Description File Name RC7611_Schematics.pdf RC7611_Operational_Description.pdf RC7611_Block_Diagram.pdf The above materials contain trade secrets and proprietary information not customarily released to the public. The public disclosure of these materials may be harmful to the applicant and provide unjustified benefits to its competitors. The applicant understands that pursuant to Section 0.457 of the Rules, disclosure of this application and all accompanying documentation will not be made before the date of the Grant for this application. Sincerely, ____________________ Deanna Zakharia Regulatory Compliance Manager E-mail: Deanna.zakharia@motorolasolutions.com _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13g Revision 1 (2 Feb 2023)
1 2 3 | Murata Third-party confidential letter | Cover Letter(s) | 156.71 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Third Party Confidentiality Letter Date: June 22, 2023 Office of Engineering and Technology Laboratory Division Equipment Authorization Branch Federal Communications Commission Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 Subject: Third Party Confidentiality Request for Exhibits under FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 Dear Sir/Madam, Pursuant of Section 0.457 and 0.459 of the Commissions Rules and KDB 726920 D01 Confidentiality Request Procedures, we hereby request that the exhibits listed below, submitted in support of the certification application for FCC ID: AZ499FT7164, be withheld permanently from public disclosure:
Exhibit Type Schematics Block Diagram Operational Description File Name 1DX_circuit diagram.pdf type1dx.pdf Operational Description Murata_1518 556 1DX 20160324 BV Proposal_re.pdf The above exhibits, owned solely by Murata and previously submitted to the Commissions permanent confidential exhibits for the certification of the Murata module with FCC ID: << VPYLB1DX >>, contain trade secrets and proprietary information not customarily release to the public. The public disclosure of these materials may be harmful to Murata and provide unjustified benefits to its competitors. Grantee of IC: 109U-
99FT7164 is authorized to reference these exhibits in its application but not authorized to access them. Timco Engineering, Inc as a TCB, is authorized to access these exhibits and include them in the filing for FCC ID AZ499FT7164 under permanent confidentiality. Best Regards, Kenji Hayashikoshi Senior Manager Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Motorola Solutions Inc. 8000 West Sunrise Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33322 EXHIBIT 13g Revision 1 (2 Feb 2023)
1 2 3 | Power of Attorney Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 60.31 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
September 7, 2016 Federal Communications Commission Authorization and Standards Division 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 RE: Authorization Letter for Grantee Code N7N Dear Sir/Madam:
I hereby authorize Mr. Denis Chabot of Sierra Wireless to act on my behalf in all manners relating to the application for equipment authorization including signing of all documents relating to these matters. Any and all acts carried out by Mr. Denis Chabot of Sierra Wireless on my behalf shall have the same effect as acts of my own. Sincerely, Ying Wang Manager, Regulatory Compliance
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Report Part 90 | Test Report | 3.81 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 1 | Test Report | 4.63 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 10 | Test Report | 4.06 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 11 | Test Report | 4.32 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 12 | Test Report | 4.18 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 13 | Test Report | 4.81 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 14 | Test Report | 3.76 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 15 | Test Report | 2.10 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 2 | Test Report | 4.85 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 3 | Test Report | 2.69 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 4 | Test Report | 2.95 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 5 | Test Report | 4.15 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 6 | Test Report | 4.81 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 7 | Test Report | 2.63 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 8 | Test Report | 3.31 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Rpt Parts 22-24-27 Pt 9 | Test Report | 3.97 MiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Module Tsup Parts22-24-27 | Test Setup Photos | 409.93 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Sierra Wireless Third-party Conf Letter | Cover Letter(s) | 517.87 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
Third Party Confidentiality Letter FCC Laboratory 7435 Oakland Mills Road Columbia, MD 21046 06/22/2023 Subject: Third Party Confidentiality Request for Exhibits under FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 To Whom It May Concern:
Pursuant of Section 0.457 and 0.459 of the Commissions Rules and KDB 726920 D01 Confidentiality Request Procedures, we hereby request that the exhibits listed below, submitted in support of the certification application for FCC ID: AZ499FT7164, be withheld permanently from public disclosure:
Exhibit Type Schematics Operational Description Block Diagram Document Number or Name Version/
or Revision RC7611 Schematics n/a RC7611 Operational Description n/a File Name RC7611_Schematics.pdf RC7611_Operational_Description.pdf RC7611 Block Diagram n/a RC7611_Block_Diagram.pdf The above exhibits, owned solely by Sierra Wireless Inc. and previously submitted to the Commissions permanent confidential exhibits for the certification of the Sierra Wireless Inc. module with FCC ID: N7NRC76B, contain trade secrets and proprietary information not customarily release to the public. The public disclosure of these materials may be harmful to Sierra Wireless Inc. and provide unjustified benefits to its competitors. Grantee of FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 is authorized to reference these exhibits in its application but not authorized to access them. Timco Engineering, Inc., as a TCB, is authorized to access these exhibits and include them in the filing for FCC ID: AZ499FT7164 under permanent confidentiality. Best Regards, Signature Denis Chabot Director, Certification Page 1 of 1
1 2 3 | Statement of Certitfication | Cover Letter(s) | 119.54 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
Applicant: Motorola Solutions Inc. FCC ID: AZ499FT7164/ IC 109U-99FT7164 EXHIBIT 2 Statement of Certification
(Pursuant to FCC Part 2.907, 2.908 and RSP 100 Sec 4) 2.1 Statement of Certification Transceiver type described herein (AZ499FT7164/109U-99FT7164) is in compliance with all applicable parts of the FCC rules and ISED RSS standards. Each unit manufactured, imported, or marketed will conform to the samples tested herein, within the statistical variations that can be expected due to high volume production and test measurement error. NAME:
Navaid Karimi SIGNATURE:
DATE:
May 12th 2023 TITLE:
Sr. Staff Engineer EXHIBIT 2a Revision 1 (2 Aug 2022) SHEET 1 OF 2 Applicant: Motorola Solutions Inc. FCC ID: AZ499FT7164/ IC 109U-99FT7164 2.2 Attestation Statement (Equipment Class DTS and DSS Bluetooth/WiFi) This device contains an embedded Bluetooth device and WiFi device that are compliant with the applicable FCC Part 15C and ISED RSS 247 regulations. Part 15.247 (a)(1) / RSS 247 Section 5.1 The hopping sequence must be pseudo random. Each frequency must be used equally on the average by each transmitter. The receivers input bandwidth is approximately equal to the transmit bandwidth. The receiver hops in sequence with the transmitted signal. Part 15.247 (g) / RSS 247 Section 5.1 The system is designed to comply with all of the regulations in this section when the transmitter is presented with a continuous data (or information) Part 15.247(h) / RSS 247 Section 5.1 The system does not coordinate its channel selection/hopping sequence with other frequency hopping systems for the express purpose of avoiding the simultaneous occupancy of individual hopping frequencies by multiple transmitters. NAME:
Navaid Karimi SIGNATURE:
DATE:
May 12th 2023 TITLE:
Sr. Staff Engineer EXHIBIT 2a Revision 1 (2 Aug 2022) SHEET 2 OF 2
1 2 3 | Test Setup Photos SAR Appendix F | Test Setup Photos | 629.36 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
1 2 3 | Attestation BT WLAN Declaration | Attestation Statements | 120.98 KiB | June 29 2023 / June 30 2023 |
BT and WIFI 2.4GHz Declaration To whom it may concern, This is a Bluetooth/WIFI 2.4GHz combination antenna with FCC/IC ID: AZ499FT7164/109U-99FT7164. This Bluetooth/WIFI 2.4GHz co-existence mechanism is to ensure that the Bluetooth and WIFI 2.4 GHz transmitters would not simultaneously operate. Therefore, Bluetooth and WIFI 2.4 GHz antennas in FCC/IC ID: AZ499FT7164/109U-99FT7164 should not be considered to be able to transmit simultaneously. Though the users can use Bluetooth and WIFI 2.4GHz simultaneously, the real situation is that Bluetooth and WIFI 2.4GHz are used by time sharing and no overlap transmission. Should you have any questions, please have my best attention. Sincerely yours,
Name: Navaid Karimi Title: Sr. Staff Engineer Tel: (551)308-6626 E-mail: navaid.karimi@motorolasolutions.com Date: March 21, 2023 EXHIBIT 2 Revision 2b (2 Feb 2023) SHEET 1 OF 2 WLAN Channels and Mode Declaration We, Motorola Solutions, Inc., declare that the device, FCC ID: AZ499FT7164, does not support any non-
US channels in all the operational mode(s) in the US market. All non-US frequencies, US 2.4G channel 12-
13 and Country code selection are disabled through proprietary software and are not user changeable. Should you have any question or comment regarding this matter, please do not hesitate to contact me. Sincerely yours,
Name: Navaid Karimi Title: Sr. Staff Engineer Tel: (551)308-6626 E-mail: navaid.karimi@motorolasolutions.com Date: March 21, 2023 EXHIBIT 2 Revision 2b (2 Feb 2023) SHEET 2 OF 2
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2023-06-30 | 1860 ~ 1900 | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | Original Equipment |
2 | 2402 ~ 2480 | DSS - Part 15 Spread Spectrum Transmitter | ||
3 | 2412 ~ 2462 | DTS - Digital Transmission System |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 2 3 | Effective |
2023-06-30
|
||||
1 2 3 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Motorola Solutions, Inc.
|
||||
1 2 3 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0003778479
|
||||
1 2 3 | Physical Address |
8000 West Sunrise Blvd
|
||||
1 2 3 |
Ft Lauderdale, Florida 33322
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1 2 3 |
United States
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app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 2 3 | TCB Application Email Address |
c******@timcoengr.com
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1 2 3 |
t******@timcoengr.com
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1 2 3 | TCB Scope |
B1: Commercial mobile radio services equipment in the following 47 CFR Parts 20, 22 (cellular), 24,25 (below 3 GHz) & 27
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1 2 3 |
A4: UNII devices & low power transmitters using spread spectrum techniques
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app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 2 3 | Grantee Code |
AZ4
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1 2 3 | Equipment Product Code |
99FT7164
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app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 2 3 | Name |
D**** Z******
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1 2 3 | Title |
Regulatory Compliance Manager
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1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
95472********
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1 2 3 | Fax Number |
--********
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1 2 3 |
d******@motorolasolutions.com
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app s | Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 2 3 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | Yes | ||||
1 2 3 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 2 3 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Equipment Class | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | ||||
1 2 3 | DSS - Part 15 Spread Spectrum Transmitter | |||||
1 2 3 | DTS - Digital Transmission System | |||||
1 2 3 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | Body Worn Camera with BT/BTLE, Wi-Fi and LTE | ||||
1 2 3 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 2 3 | Purpose / Application is for | Original Equipment | ||||
1 2 3 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | Yes | ||||
1 2 3 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Grant Comments | Output Power is EIRP and ERP for above and below 1 GHz, respectively. This device must be restricted to work related operations in an Occupational/Controlled RF exposure Environment. All qualified end-users of this device must have the knowledge to control their exposure conditions and/or duration to comply with Occupational/Controlled SAR limit and requirements. A label, as described in this filing, must be displayed on the device to direct users to specific training information for meeting Occupational Exposure Requirements, and users must be provided with the training information. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific body-worn accessories, such as belt-clips and holsters, tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR for body-worn accessory and simultaneous transmission exposure conditions are 0.36 W/kg and 0.47 W/kg, respectively. This device supports LTE of 1.4, 3, 5, 10, 15 and 20 MHz bandwidth modes for FDD LTE Bands 2, 4, 25 and 66; LTE of 1.4, 3, 5 and 10 MHz bandwidth modes for FDD LTE Bands 5 and 12; and LTE of 5 and 10 MHz bandwidth modes for FDD LTE Bands 13 and 14. | ||||
1 2 3 | SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific body-worn accessories, such as belt-clips and holsters, tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR for body-worn accessory and simultaneous transmission exposure conditions are < 0.10 W/kg and 0.37 W/kg, respectively. | |||||
1 2 3 | Output Power listed is the maximum conducted output power. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific body-worn accessories, such as belt-clips and holsters, tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR for body-worn accessory and simultaneous transmission exposure conditions are 0.12 W/kg and 0.47 W/kg, respectively. This device supports 20 MHz bandwidth modes. | |||||
1 2 3 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 2 3 | Firm Name |
Element Materials Technology Dallas - Plano
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1 2 3 | Name |
R**** W******
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1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
503 8********
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1 2 3 |
r******@element.com
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Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 24E | BC | 1855 | 1905 | 0.1901 | 2.5 ppm | 9M70G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 24E | BC | 1860 | 1900 | 0.17906 | 2.5 ppm | 19M0G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 3 | 24E | BC | 1850.7 | 1909.3 | 0.18923 | 2.5 ppm | 1M31W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 4 | 24E | BC | 1860 | 1900 | 0.19678 | 2.5 ppm | 19M3W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 5 | 27 | BC | 1720 | 1745 | 0.17021 | 2.5 ppm | 19M3G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 6 | 27 | BC | 1720 | 1745 | 0.16481 | 2.5 ppm | 19M2W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 7 | 27 | BC | 699.7 | 715.3 | 0.04841 | 2.5 ppm | 1M31G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 8 | 27 | BC | 704 | 711 | 0.04602 | 2.5 ppm | 9M76G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 9 | 27 | BC | 699.7 | 715.3 | 0.06251 | 2.5 ppm | 1M31W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 27 | BC | 704 | 711 | 0.05915 | 2.5 ppm | 9M79W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 11 | 27 | BC | 782 | 782 | 0.05701 | 2.5 ppm | 9M64G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 12 | 27 | BC | 779.5 | 784.5 | 0.09078 | 2.5 ppm | 4M91W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 13 | 22H | BC | 829 | 844 | 0.04083 | 2.5 ppm | 9M81G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 14 | 22H | BC | 825.5 | 847.5 | 0.06412 | 2.5 ppm | 2M97W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 15 | 22H | BC | 829 | 844 | 0.06397 | 2.5 ppm | 9M66W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 16 | 9 | BC | 793 | 793 | 0.09462 | 2.5 ppm | 8M98G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 17 | 9 | BC | 790.5 | 795.5 | 0.07345 | 2.5 ppm | 4M49W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 18 | 9 | BC | 793 | 793 | 0.07345 | 2.5 ppm | 8M96W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 19 | 24E | BC | 1850 | 1915 | 0.21527 | 2.5 ppm | 2M95G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 24E | BC | 1850 | 1915 | 0.19098 | 2.5 ppm | 19M2G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 21 | 24E | BC | 1850 | 1915 | 0.18323 | 2.5 ppm | 19M3W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 22 | 27 | BC | 1710 | 1780 | 0.17061 | 2.5 ppm | 14M6G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 23 | 27 | BC | 1710 | 1780 | 0.15995 | 2.5 ppm | 19M3G7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 24 | 27 | BC | 1710 | 1780 | 0.14757 | 2.5 ppm | 19M2W7D | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1 | 15C | 2402.00000000 | 2480.00000000 | 0.0049000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 1 | 15C | 2402 | 2480 | 0.0021 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 2 | 15C | 2412 | 2462 | 0.4073 |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
This product uses the FCC Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the FCC