While you're walking around your house tonight, remember to set your clocks back one hour, check the batteries in your smoke detectors and check your fire extinguishers.
Just replaced all mine a couple months ago . Mine are hardwired , battery backup .check the batteries in your smoke detectors and check your fire extinguishers.
New furnace and AC last March . Replaced the detectors and added a couple more .carbon monoxide detectors,
Just replaced all mine a couple months ago . Mine are hardwired , battery backup .
The new ones come with an " integrated " battery . Good for 10 years ( they say ) .
I ordered the wrong ones first , battery only . Amazon refused a return . Figured it wasn't worth the 200 bucks or the fight to have someone trapped in a fire . Reordered the right ones right from the manufacturer and saved 50 bucks on an upgraded model ! Still stuck with the other 4 though .
New furnace and AC last March . Replaced the detectors and added a couple more .
Yup , good looking out .
Not opposed to that , but at 50 bucks a piece gonna hang on to them and see if I have a need down the road . Supposed to be good until you pull the tab on the battery . 10 years from that point . So they say .Perhaps you can pay it forward with the 4 battery only ones?
Not opposed to that , but at 50 bucks a piece gonna hang on to them and see if I have a need down the road . Supposed to be good until you pull the tab on the battery . 10 years from that point . So they say .
I could have used them without the hardwire , but I want that " reported " to upstairs if somethings starts downstairs . I didn't know if I could use the 3 new hardwired ones to do that , mixed in with the others not being plugged in ? I have 7 total . I'm thinking to report to all , they all need plugged in , or the plug jumpered ? Like I said , the risk for 200 bucks was silly .
Thanks for the reminder. I have everything but the check the fire extinguishers covered. Going on my to-do list for today right now. I got serious about fire some years ago and have them in a central location upstairs, downstairs and right by the door from garage to the kitchen.
I'll add by saying, if you live in a two story house, often the bedrooms are upstairs. Good quality emergency escape ladders can save your life. I bought these and have them at an accessible window on each end of the house. When someone stays here upstairs, I always show them where they are and a brief explanation of how to deploy them. Avoid putting any other stuff on the floor in front of those windows.
This has also reminded me to measure my solvent cans and seek an explosion proof cabinet for my garage. I keep gallon cans of alcohol, lacquer thinner, acetone and mineral spirits up on a shelf in my garage. If those went up...my ammo is only right upstairs 10-12 feet away. Would be pretty ugly. Need to get the solvents on the concrete floor in a safety box in the garage.