Cleaning Your Alarm; Limitations Of Smoke Alarms - Kidde 910 User Manual

Lithium (non-replaceable sealed in) battery-operated smoke alarm with alarm memory and smart hush control
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CLEANING YOUR ALARM

YOUR ALARM SHOULD BE CLEANED AT LEAST ONCE A YEAR
If the tamper resist feature has been activated you will need to follow the instructions
in Section 3 to remove your alarm for maintenance.
To clean your alarm, remove it from the mounting bracket as outlined in the begin-
ning of this section. You can clean the interior of your alarm (sensing chamber) by
using compressed air or a vacuum cleaner hose and blowing or vacuuming through
the openings around the perimeter of the alarm. The outside of the alarm can be
wiped with a damp cloth.
After cleaning, reinstall your alarm and test your alarm by using the test button. If
cleaning does not restore the alarm to normal operation the alarm should be replaced.

7.LIMITATIONS OF SMOKE ALARMS

WARNING: PLEASE READ CAREFULLY AND THOROUGHLY
• NFPA 72 states: Life safety from fire in residential occupancies is based primarily on
early notification to occupants of the need to escape, followed by the appropriate
egress actions by those occupants. Fire warning systems for dwelling units are
capable of protecting about half of the occupants in potentially fatal fires. Victims
are often intimate with the fire, too old or young, or physically or mentally impaired
such that they cannot escape even when warned early enough that escape should
be possible. For these people, other strategies such as protection-in-place or assist-
ed escape or rescue are necessary.
• Smoke alarms are devices that can provide early warning of possible fires at a rea-
sonable cost; however, alarms have sensing limitations. Ionization type alarms offer
a broad range of fire sensing capabilities but are better at detecting fast flaming
fires than slow smoldering fires. Photoelectric alarms sense smoldering fires better
than flaming fires. Home fires develop in different ways and are often unpre-
dictable. Neither type of alarm (photoelectric or ionization) is always best, and a
given alarm may not always provide warning of a fire.
• A battery powered alarm must have a battery of the specified type, in good condition
and installed properly.
• A.C. powered alarms (without battery backup) will not operate if the A.C. power
has been cut off, such as by an electrical fire or an open fuse.
• Smoke alarms must be tested regularly to make sure the batteries and the alarm
circuits are in good operating condition.
• Smoke alarms cannot provide an alarm if smoke does not reach the alarm.
Therefore, smoke alarms may not sense fires starting in chimneys, walls, on roofs,
on the other side of a closed door or on a different floor.
• If the alarm is located outside the bedroom or on a different floor, it may not wake
up a sound sleeper.
• The use of alcohol or drugs may also impair one's ability to hear the smoke alarm.
For maximum protection, a smoke alarm should be installed in each sleeping area
on every level of a home.
• Although smoke alarms can help save lives by providing an early warning of a fire,
they are not a substitute for an insurance policy. Home owners and renters should
have adequate insurance to protect their lives and property.

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