PP. This is true. It is not electrical wiring unless you change the brand. You do need to have a compatible, not-cracked trim ring. I am the person who posted the long explanation above. I have never wired anything. But I've been frightened out of my wits with small kids at home and middle of the night false alarms before. I believe my issues are spiders and humidity. Our false alarms are usually the corner of master bedroom alarm in summer. When it's humid. In the middle of the night. New and old alarms. Now we crack the door a couple inches. Be the master of your fate and do some diagnosis or overpay and likely have the issue repeat. I recommend talking alarms that say "Fire" or "CO2". If you can't see or smell fire, but "Fire" is the message, it helps your reaction/planning speed |
Get nest or something similar. They will tell you 'smoke in the master bedroom' or 'CO2 in the garage' The alerts also come to your phone. If they have an error, instead of the chirp, you get a push notification to your phone with the actual problem |
PP. That would be overkill for my small house. I also don't trust those Nest devices. I've known people whose thermostats shut off for updates in the middle of the night or turned the house temp down because they went to dinner at a friends house. And you can't have your phone off or away from you. Can the sensor explain spiders and humidity false alarms? |
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Look at the smoke detector. Get brand and model.
Order one from manufacturer or Home Depot. Make electrician appointment to get it installed. You will pay for a 30 min call but it's pushing the ea$y button. |
| I would try cleaning it with compressed air |
This. Wired just means it runs on house power and not battery. The base of the unit serves as kind of an outlet and you plug in a new detector almost the way you plug in a lamp. |
If it's dust from the original construction you won't have that problem again. |
| I can’t even remember why I once called the customer service number on one of my smoke detectors, but they sent me a new one for free. |
| It is rare to see such a strong consensus across DCUM on...anything! |
| Replace it |
| 99% sure whoever installed your smoke detectors used the batteries that came with the smoke detectors. They're crappy and old. Replace them with Duracells and the problem ends. |
To inspect or to install a new one? |
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I'd call the manufacturer. If they are still under warranty, they will send you a new one for free. I've had this problem with smoke detectors I bought last year, and it is maddening.
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