Fire and Emergency New Zealand recommend long-life photoelectric smoke alarms.
Fire and Emergency New Zealand recommend long-life photoelectric smoke alarms. They are far more effective than ionisation alarms at detecting slow smouldering fires, which burn for hours before bursting into flames.
You are watching: Buying and Installing Smoke Alarms
Better yet, choose a set of photoelectric smoke alarms that can be connected to each other via Bluetooth technology, or wiring together. If a fire is detected in one room of the house, interconnected alarms will trigger all the alarms in your home, so everyone will be alerted to a fire sooner. This is especially important in multi-storey homes and homes with long hallways.
The great thing is, most smoke alarms now come with a built-in, sealed, long-life battery, which will last as long as the smoke alarm – about ten years. That’s a big improvement on the old 9-volt batteries, which are cheaper but will start ‘chirping’ to be replaced after about one year. If you have a smoke alarm with an old 9-volt battery, it’s time to upgrade to a long-life photoelectric alarm.
Some smoke alarms can be wired into your home’s power or security system. But you will still need a back-up battery installed in case of a power cut, and installation will be more involved (and costly) as you will need an electrician to run wiring to each location.
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If you’re deaf or hard of hearing, there are specialised smoke alarm systems with extra features such as extra loud and/or lower pitch alarm sounds, flashing strobe lights, or vibrating devices. Having hard-wired, interconnected photoelectric smoke alarms fitted alongside bed-shakers and/or strobe lights is ideal.
More about specialised smoke alarms
Both landlords and tenants are responsible. The landlord is responsible to ensure there are working smoke alarms in every rental, and to replace any smoke alarms that no longer work with new photoelectric ones. If the rental has an older alarm with a 9-Volt battery, replacing the battery is the tenant’s responsibility.
Learn more about landlord responsibilities
Fire and Emergency New Zealand recommend installing a smoke alarm in every bedroom, hallway and living area. You may also choose to install a heat alarm in the kitchen, laundry, bathroom or garage.
Don’t put a smoke alarm in your kitchen, where smoke from cooking could set it off – use a heat alarm here instead.
Smoke alarms cannot detect smoke through a closed door, so think carefully about the layout of your home.
Your landlord must install a smoke alarm:
If you’re building or renovating and have been issued a building consent, the New Zealand Building Code requires an approved smoke alarm to be fitted in every escape route (hallway) and within three metres of every sleeping space (bedroom) door.
Source: https://gardencourte.com
Categories: Kitchens
This post was last modified on 05/11/2023 02:23
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