Limitations Of Smoke And Carbon Monoxide Alarms - Kidde 900-CUDR User Manual

Combination photoelectric smoke & carbon monoxide alarm
Table of Contents

Advertisement

6. Limitations Of Smoke And Carbon Monoxide Alarms

WARNING: PLEASE REAd CAREFULLY ANd THOROUGHLY
• 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.
• There are situations where a smoke alarm may not be effective to protect against fire as stated in the NFPA
Standard 72. For instance:
a) smoking in bed
b) leaving children home alone
c) cleaning with flammable liquids, such as gasoline
• Fire warning systems for dwelling units are capable of protecting about half of the occupants in potentially fatal
fires. A smoke alarm may not be effective in some situations, such as during incendiary fires where the fire grows so
rapidly that an occupant's egress is blocked even with properly located smoke alarms, or when victims are intimate
with the fire (for example, when a person's clothes catch fire while cooking), 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, additional strategies such as protection-in-place or assisted escape or rescue are necessary. *
• Leading authorities recommend that both ionization and photoelectric smoke alarms be installed to help ensure
optimal detection of the various types of fires that can occur within the home. Ionization sensing alarms may
detect invisible fire particles (associated with fast flaming fires) sooner than photoelectric alarms. Photoelectric
sensing alarms may detect visible fire particles (associated with slow smoldering fires) sooner than ionization
alarms.
• A battery powered alarm must have a battery of the specified type, in good condition and installed properly (this
model includes two AA replaceable batteries.)
• Smoke alarms must be tested regularly to make sure the battery 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, within walls, on roofs, on the other side of a closed door or other obstruction.
• 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 optimal detection, a smoke
alarm should be installed in each sleeping area on every level of a home.
This alarm is not intended to alert hearing impaired individuals.
* Reference National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) standard 72
9

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents