
With smoke detectors, your risk of dying in a home fire is cut nearly
in half. Replace batteries once a year, or whenever a detector chirps
to signal that its battery is low. Do not ever borrow detector batteries
for other uses - a disabled smoke detector cannot save your life!
Most fatal home fires occur at night, while people are asleep. Poisonous
gases and smoke from a fire can numb the senses in a very short time.
Every home needs a device that can wake people up in time to escape
from a fire. Almost every day, a smoke detector saves somebody's life.
Of all the low-cost fire alarm devices you can buy, fire officials
consider smoke detectors the most effective!
Choosing A Smoke Detector:
Dozens of reputable brands of smoke detectors are readily available.
No matter where you buy your detectors or what type they are, be sure
to buy only "labelled" units - those bearing the mark of
an organization that tests and evaluates products. Any labelled smoke
detector offers protection - whether it is powered by batteries or
household current; whether it is a photo-electric or an ionization
device. But to get the protection you paid for, it is vital that you
follow the manufacturer's recommendations for installation, testing
and maintenance.
How Many Do You Need?
According to the widely accepted Standard on Household Fire Warning
Equipment (NFPA 74), minimum protection requires smoke detectors outside
each bedroom and on each additional level of the house - including
the basement. For extra protection, the National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA) recommends that you also install detectors inside each bedroom,
the dining room, furnace room, utility room and hallways. If your
family sleeps with the bedroom doors closed, it is especially important
to install detectors inside the bedrooms. Also, some smoke detectors
are not recommended for kitchens because of false alarms from cooking
vapours, or garages, where automobile exhaust might cause alarms,
or for attics or other unheated spaces where extremes of temperature
or humidity might affect their operation.
How To Install Your Smoke Detector:
To install most smoke detectors all you need is a screwdriver and
a drill. Most smoke detectors operate either on batteries or household
current. A detector that plugs into a wall outlet must have a restraining
device so that the plug cannot accidentally be pulled from the wall.
Detectors can also be hard-wired into the electrical system. But never
hard-wire a detector to a circuit that can be turned off at a wall
switch.
Because
smoke rises, each director should be mounted high on a wall or on
the ceiling to detect traces of smoke. For a wall-mounted unit,
the top of the detector should be 4 to 12 inches (10 to 30 cm) from
the ceiling. A ceiling mounted detector should be placed at least
4 inches (10 cm) from any wall. In a room with a high pitched ceiling,
mount the detector on or near the ceiling's highest point.
Most
home fires start in living areas - the den, family room or living
room. On a floor with no bedrooms, install the required detector
in or near the living area. In a stairway to an upper storey, install
the detector in the path where smoke would travel up the stairs.
Don't
install a detector near a window, door or air register where drafts
could impair the detector's operation.
Locate
a basement smoke detector close to the stairway leading to the floor
above. But don't install the detector at the top of the basement
stairs; dead air space near the door may prevent smoke from reaching
the detector.
Smoke Detector Maintenance:
Replace the batteries at least once a year or according to
the manufacturer's recommendations. Warn everyone in your household
to leave working batteries in smoke detectors - resist the temptation
to borrow them for other purposes. Never paint a smoke detector.
Cobwebs and dust can impair a detector's sensitivity, clean your
detectors at least once a year according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Follow the manufacturer's instructions for testing your smoke detectors.
It only takes a moment to test a smoke detector that could save
your life; test yours once a week to make sure you're protected.
|