Smoke Detectors
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Mine died when I wanted to sell my house ... I come home after multiple showings and 3 of them were chirping! Why then? Why did 3 start at the same time? If multiples fail at the same time, why didn't all of them fail at the same time? Very odd coincidence.
Pualee wrote:
I come home after multiple showings and 3 of them were chirping!
Some are wired together so that if one goes off, they all go off. Unfortunately, it makes it impossible to figure out which one needs the battery replaced.
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:laugh: :laugh: :thumbsup:
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smoke detectors? We don't need smoke detectors.
If you can keep your head while those about you are losing theirs, perhaps you don't understand the situation.
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If you are in the UK they should be mains wired
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
I'm in Canada, and I'm not aware that I'm required to have smoke detectors at all in my residence, but I do get a break on my home-owners insurance for having them. I think maybe new builds are required to have wired detectors, but my house dates from the 60s, so it would require a retrofit in any case. Are you saying that a 15th C cottage in the UK needs to be retrofitted with mains wired smoke detectors? My battery operated smoke detectors have a sticker saying "replace in 2020", at which point I'm guessing the smoke-detecting ability has degraded beyond any usefulness. Assuming that wired-in detectors have the same issue, do you have a replaceable detection unit, or do you need to wire-in a new unit? Either way, will they start chirping in the middle of the night to let you know that the detector needs replacing?
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Mine died when I wanted to sell my house ... I come home after multiple showings and 3 of them were chirping! Why then? Why did 3 start at the same time? If multiples fail at the same time, why didn't all of them fail at the same time? Very odd coincidence.
Did the ghosts follow you to your new house, as well?
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This is a huge coincidence, but just last night I went to bed and I noticed the small light from the smoke detector (it's there, but I'm not very aware of it) and I thought to myself "That's been hanging there for years, when's the battery going to run out? Probably somewhere in the dead of night..." I've slept through smoke alarms in the past (luckily just my dad testing the alarm) :laugh: I'm about 10 years older now, so I'm not sure if I'd still sleep through it... Stress makes you sleep lighter :sigh:
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you could mod and use your wireless mouse on a phone charging pad.
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go for the zero power option: hang up some whistling kettles instead.
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If you are in the UK they should be mains wired
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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Pualee wrote:
I come home after multiple showings and 3 of them were chirping!
Some are wired together so that if one goes off, they all go off. Unfortunately, it makes it impossible to figure out which one needs the battery replaced.
Latest Article - A 4-Stack rPI Cluster with WiFi-Ethernet Bridging Learning to code with python is like learning to swim with those little arm floaties. It gives you undeserved confidence and will eventually drown you. - DangerBunny Artificial intelligence is the only remedy for natural stupidity. - CDP1802
Like others, when one battery fails I replace them all. I learned this lesson the first time it happened -- 3 smoke detectors failing within a week. This wasn't as bad as when the sensor in a CO detector failed. We got the babies out and I opened all the windows. Took an hour to find the documentation that said either the battery was failing, the sensor was failing, or we were going to die. Given that the battery tested good and we hadn't died, I was quite certain it was the sensor ...
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Like others, when one battery fails I replace them all. I learned this lesson the first time it happened -- 3 smoke detectors failing within a week. This wasn't as bad as when the sensor in a CO detector failed. We got the babies out and I opened all the windows. Took an hour to find the documentation that said either the battery was failing, the sensor was failing, or we were going to die. Given that the battery tested good and we hadn't died, I was quite certain it was the sensor ...
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Most CO detectors have a built-in kill switch around 10 years because the sensors don't work anymore. Always write the install date on them.
englebart wrote:
Most CO detectors have a built-in kill switch around 10 years because the sensors don't work anymore. Always write the install date on them.
You may have mixed up smoke and CO detectors. Smoke detectors are supposed to last 10 years (just replaced mine and the warranty including backup battery is 10 years). According to several handyman sites I checked, CO detectors last 5 to 7 years -- although my story took place 20 years ago and we had a failure at 3 years. I don't know if the CO sensors last longer now or if I had a defective one. Regardless of that, your advice to record when installation occurred is spot on! Beyond that, I'm now in the habit of writing the purchase date and where purchased on the user manual for everything that comes with a user manual. Anything that doesn't have a manual gets recorded in a small notebook, which goes in the filing cabinet along with product documentation.
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If you are in the UK they should be mains wired
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
I'm not sure if wired-in is a universal requirement in the USA, but it is in my county. Mine are wired in -- currently the backup batteries are typically warrantied for 10 years, after which the unit should be replaced.
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I'm in Canada, and I'm not aware that I'm required to have smoke detectors at all in my residence, but I do get a break on my home-owners insurance for having them. I think maybe new builds are required to have wired detectors, but my house dates from the 60s, so it would require a retrofit in any case. Are you saying that a 15th C cottage in the UK needs to be retrofitted with mains wired smoke detectors? My battery operated smoke detectors have a sticker saying "replace in 2020", at which point I'm guessing the smoke-detecting ability has degraded beyond any usefulness. Assuming that wired-in detectors have the same issue, do you have a replaceable detection unit, or do you need to wire-in a new unit? Either way, will they start chirping in the middle of the night to let you know that the detector needs replacing?
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If you are in the UK they should be mains wired
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
Here in Norway I have never seen anything but battery driven smoke detectors in private homes. And you are required to have at least one on each floor (in every housing unit if there is more than one). The smoke detectors are required to warn you long time before they run out of power; I believe the requirement is a minimum of two weeks. If you have more than one smoke detector, you are not required to interconnect them, but it is highly recommended. My previous set of detectors was made for wired interconnection, but before I got myself up to actually stretch the wires, the detectors were ready for replacement. My next (i.e. current) set of detectors don't need any wiring, they have wireless interconnection. There was some discussion, maybe a year ago, after lots of media reported on a study showing that you should never keep the door to bedroom open while you sleep: If there is a raging fire in the corridor outside your bedroom, a closed door can hold it back from your bedroom for the few second it takes you to escape from the bedroom e.g. through the window. But the study failed to point out that if your home is properly equipped with interconnected smoke detectors, you would be awakened by a siren several minutes earlier, with a fair chance to stop the fire before it develops, and certainly before the raging flames reach your bedroom door. ... So I still sleep with my bedroom door open!
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This is a huge coincidence, but just last night I went to bed and I noticed the small light from the smoke detector (it's there, but I'm not very aware of it) and I thought to myself "That's been hanging there for years, when's the battery going to run out? Probably somewhere in the dead of night..." I've slept through smoke alarms in the past (luckily just my dad testing the alarm) :laugh: I'm about 10 years older now, so I'm not sure if I'd still sleep through it... Stress makes you sleep lighter :sigh:
Best, Sander sanderrossel.com Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript Object-Oriented Programming in C# Succinctly
Sander Rossel wrote:
I've slept through smoke alarms in the past (luckily just my dad testing the alarm) :laugh:
An alarm located in the same room as you were sleeping? Are you sure that smoke detector satisfies the requirements for sound pressure level? If your daddy's testing was just a quick press of the test button, causing a short sound of a second or two, I certainly believe that a kid in deep sleep may not wake up. But if it goes on, has the required intensity, and the alarm is located in the room where you sleep, then if you don't wake up and I was you dad, I would certainly get you awake and get out of you how many beers you had last night :-)
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Well ... it's actually physics, not design. Battery output varies with temperature, and most houses are coolest between 02:00 and 05:00 (for obvious reasons). As they cool, the battery can't put out as much as it can during the warmer day, and the smoke detector picks this up as an imminent battery failure and starts the "replace me" chirp. Or in our case it talks to you, which at 02:30 is even more disconcerting as it wakes you up and then shuts up so you hear something and don't know what it was ...
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:laugh:Sometimes. But ... I really like it when what looks like a random event that apocryphally happend 9 times out of 10 turns out to be a real situation that occurs because of the design of all such devices forces it to. :-D Battery operated smoke detectors have to monitor the battery because if they didn't they would fail unnoticed and risk lives. But using a temperature sensor in concert with the battery output wouldn't help because if it relied on the temperature change affecting the battery, it would fail by day when it's less likely to be noticed, and not work at night when more domestic fire happen. And (of course) fires alter the temperature). So it's a serendipitous safety feature, which I love the whole idea of! :laugh:
Sent from my Amstrad PC 1640 Never throw anything away, Griff Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay... AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!