quicksandfarmer
Elite Member
I'm thinking of replacing my smoke detectors and I'm looking for some first-hand experience and recommendations.
I have hard-wired smoke detectors that were installed by the electrician when we had the house remodeled a few years ago. They have 9-volt battery backup. At the time RI had its own regulations which were a bit overboard, so we have 9 of them (RI has since gone to the national code). The things are a pain in the ***. The batteries go out all the time, and when they do _- usually in the middle of the night -- they chirp intermittently. There's no visual indicator of which one is out, and there's a number of spots in the house where there are two within a few feet of each other so the sound isn't much help in locating which one is chirping. I've taken to buying batteries in bulk from Amazon, and replacing them all at once, but that's a pain.
We are close to the ocean and often get fog. When that happens sometimes it sets off the smoke detectors. Usually that's around 3 in the morning.
The original ones were the ionizing type. The one on the first floor would often get set off by cooking in the kitchen. I replaced it with a photoelectric type, the First Alert 7010B four years ago. That solved the false alarm problem. Unfortunately, last week it just started going off for no reason. Reading the reviews on Amazon, this seems to be a common problem for this model.
The latest thing seems to be detectors with sealed lithium batteries with a 10 year life. Since that's the lifetime of the smoke detector anyway, the idea is that you never change the battery, when the battery runs out you just replace the whole unit -- or even all the units in the house. That appeals to me.
Finally, Rhode Island requires that one detector on each floor also be a carbon monoxide detector.
So, does anyone have recommendations for a model of smoke detector that:
* Is hard wired
* Has a 10-year sealed battery
* Is resistant to false alarms
* Is durable
* Has a visual indicator in addition to an audible indicator when the battery is low
* Is available in a combo carbon monoxide detector model
Oh, and is reasonably priced.
Thanks.
I have hard-wired smoke detectors that were installed by the electrician when we had the house remodeled a few years ago. They have 9-volt battery backup. At the time RI had its own regulations which were a bit overboard, so we have 9 of them (RI has since gone to the national code). The things are a pain in the ***. The batteries go out all the time, and when they do _- usually in the middle of the night -- they chirp intermittently. There's no visual indicator of which one is out, and there's a number of spots in the house where there are two within a few feet of each other so the sound isn't much help in locating which one is chirping. I've taken to buying batteries in bulk from Amazon, and replacing them all at once, but that's a pain.
We are close to the ocean and often get fog. When that happens sometimes it sets off the smoke detectors. Usually that's around 3 in the morning.
The original ones were the ionizing type. The one on the first floor would often get set off by cooking in the kitchen. I replaced it with a photoelectric type, the First Alert 7010B four years ago. That solved the false alarm problem. Unfortunately, last week it just started going off for no reason. Reading the reviews on Amazon, this seems to be a common problem for this model.
The latest thing seems to be detectors with sealed lithium batteries with a 10 year life. Since that's the lifetime of the smoke detector anyway, the idea is that you never change the battery, when the battery runs out you just replace the whole unit -- or even all the units in the house. That appeals to me.
Finally, Rhode Island requires that one detector on each floor also be a carbon monoxide detector.
So, does anyone have recommendations for a model of smoke detector that:
* Is hard wired
* Has a 10-year sealed battery
* Is resistant to false alarms
* Is durable
* Has a visual indicator in addition to an audible indicator when the battery is low
* Is available in a combo carbon monoxide detector model
Oh, and is reasonably priced.
Thanks.