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Ulefone Note 16 Pro, Phonegate & the SAR Chess Match

Ulefone Note 16 Pro, Phonegate & the SAR Chess Match

: Why France’s Latest “All‑Clear” Should Make Consumers Think Twice


1. What just happened?

On 11 July 2025 France’s spectrum regulator – ANFR – lifted the February sales‑ban on the Ulefone Note 16 Pro after the manufacturer pushed a firmware update that cut the phone’s limb‑SAR from 4.78 W/kg to 3.01 W/kg (EU limit = 4 W/kg). Less than a week later, the non‑profit watchdog Phonegate Alert blasted the decision, warning that “the danger persists” and calling the reinstatement “a serious breach and a betrayal of consumer trust.”

Phonegate’s engineers uncovered two key problems:


2. A quick timeline

Date Event SAR (limb) Outcome
17 Feb 2025 ANFR orders withdrawal & recall of Ulefone Note 16 Pro and Oukitel WP28 4.78 W/kg Sales banned
11 Jul 2025 Firmware V16 released; ANFR retests & approves 3.01 W/kg Ban lifted (conditional)
17 Jul 2025 Phonegate issues rebuttal press release Calls for continued withdrawal

3. Who is Phonegate Alert?

Founded in 2018 by French physician Dr Marc Arazi, Phonegate Alert is the NGO that forced ANFR to publish hundreds of hidden SAR test reports. Their mission: expose discrepancies between laboratory compliance measurements and the way people actually carry their phones (skin‑contact, pockets, bra straps, etc.).

The group’s investigations have already led to 60+ models being withdrawn or patched in France, including devices from Apple, Motorola, Nokia, Xiaomi and lesser‑known brands.


4. This is not an isolated case – recent SAR controversies

Model Country action Measured SAR violation Status
Apple iPhone 12 France, Sept 2023 5.74 W/kg limb Temporary sales ban; Apple issued OTA update within two weeks
DOOGEE X98 France, Jun 2025 6.25 W/kg limb Permanent ban (no update offered)
CrossCall Core S5 France, Jun 2025 4.33 W/kg limb Update demanded; report still unpublished
Oukitel WP28 France, Feb 2025 4.06 W/kg limb Recall; update pending

(Note: rumours about an iPhone 11 ban proved unfounded – only the iPhone 12 failed the French test protocol.)


5. Why proximity sensors matter

Modern smartphones throttle their radios when they “sense” your ear or a hard surface nearby. Disabling those sensors for type‑approval testing is therefore critical; otherwise regulators certify a “best‑case” handset that behaves very differently in your pocket.

France made this explicit in 2022: manufacturers must supply lab technicians with documented procedures or hidden codes to force maximum transmit power throughout the test. Phonegate argues that ANFR simply trusted paperwork this time instead of verifying the switches in real time, allowing Ulefone to skate through.


6. Understanding the numbers

Region SAR limit (head/trunk) SAR limit (limb) Averaging mass
EU 2 W/kg 4 W/kg 10 g tissue
USA (FCC) 1.6 W/kg 1 g tissue

Because the U.S. rule averages absorbed power over a smaller 1‑gram cube, a phone that just meets the EU limit can expose American‑style tissue to ~3× higher peak energy. Phonegate therefore calls the EU standard “structurally lenient.”


7. Implications for consumers & RF Safe readers

  1. Regulatory clearance ≠ real‑world safety. A firmware tweak that passes the bench test may not control emissions when you stream video with the case pressed against your thigh.
  2. Always update – then verify. If you own a Note 16 Pro, confirm you’re on System Version SH1_EEA_V16. If not, update manually before continued use.
  3. Use distance & shielding. RF Safe’s QuantaCase, air‑tube headsets and low‑power settings add physical barriers and limit duty cycle—controls a firmware patch cannot undermine.
  4. Check independent SAR lists. Phonegate’s database shows which models required recalls or software downgrades; use it before your next handset purchase.

8. What should regulators do next?


9. Final thoughts

The Ulefone Note 16 Pro saga reminds us that the SAR “game” is dynamic: new software can drop a number on paper, but fundamental design choices (antenna placement, sensor logic) still dictate the watts your body absorbs. Until standards reflect worst‑case reality, vigilant consumers, independent labs and advocates like Phonegate Alert remain the last line of defence.

RF Safe was founded in 1998 on exactly that premise. We will continue to track every firmware patch, every withdrawn handset and every courtroom battle – and to translate the technical alphabet soup into actionable steps you can take today to protect yourself and your family.

Stay tuned, stay updated, and—most importantly—*hold the phone at a distance!*

Source

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