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Poulsbo
Fire Department
Prevention & Safety
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Smoke
Detectors |
TEST YOUR SMOKE DETECTORS
FOR LIFE!
Death by Fire: Nearly
4,000 Americans die every year in residential fires. Most of these deaths
are not from heat or flames but from inhaling smoke and toxic fumes.
Smoke is actually the particles of combustion generated by what is burning
-- paper, wood, chemicals, plastic, upholstery, or other fuels.
Buying Time: When
a smoke detector senses smoke, an alarm automatically sounds. Most fatal
home fires occur between 8 p.m. and 8 a.m. Fires often generate lethal
amounts of unseen smoke and fumes well before flames are visible and
before heat makes residents feel uncomfortably warm. As a result, many
people who die in home fires are asleep and never wake up. When carefully
purchased, installed, and maintained, smoke detectors can prevent such
needless deaths. Smoke detectors buy time to get out of the house quickly
before toxic fumes accumulate to lethal levels.
Purchasing: Quality,
not price, should be the determining factor when buying smoke detectors.
Check for the following:
- Laboratory label, insuring
that samples of the model you are buying was carefully tested.
- Alarm loud enough to awaken
the family through closed bedroom doors.
- Malfunction signal, to
warn you when batteries are weak or dead.
- Manufacturers warranty
of at least five years.
- Ease in maintenance and
cleaning.
Which type?
IONIZATION: Contains a small amount of radioactivity that conducts
electricity. Electric current flows continuously between two electrodes
in the chamber. When smoke particles enter, they disturb the flow, causing
the alarm to go off.
PHOTOELECTRIC: Contains
a beam of light and a photocell within the chamber. When smoke enters,
it deflects the beam, causing it to strike the photocell and set off
the alarm.
Which is Better?
Ionization detectors are more sensitive to the tiny particles of combustion
that cant be seen or smelled, those emitted by flaming fires.
Photoelectric detectors are more sensitive to the large particles of
combustion emitted by smoldering fires.
The differences between the
two types are generally not critical, since the difference in response
time is only a matter of seconds. Since most home fires produce a rich
mixture of smoke types, with detectable amounts of both large-particle
and small-particle smoke early in the fires growth, either an
ionization or a photoelectric detector will meet most needs.
Placement:
Buy as many smoke detectors as it takes to give your home complete coverage.
You obviously increase your chances of survival with each detector that
you have, but one on each level of the house is the absolute minimum.
You should have a smoke detector in each bedroom, in the hallway close
to each sleeping area and in heavily occupied areas like the living
room.
When bedroom doors are left open, you should have at least one detector
in the hallway outside the bedroom area.
Installation:
- Follow the manufacturers
installation instructions.
- On the ceilings, mount
the device away from corners and walls, which have dead air space
nearby. About eight to 10 inches is the recommended distance.
- On walls, install the
detectors high, because smoke rises, and place them eight to 10 inches
away from corners and ceilings.
- Install smoke detectors
at least three feet from vents, which might re-circulate the smoke.
- Never place smoke detectors
on un-insulated walls or ceilings. Extreme temperatures can ruin batteries
and prevent smoke from reaching the detectors.
Exit Drills In The Home
Smoke detectors provide an early warning system to allow you and your
family extra time to get out of the house fast during a fire.
IF THE ALARM SOUNDS
be sure each family member knows what the alarm sounds like and what
to do. Families should regularly practice Operation EDITH - Exit Drills
In The Home. This means having a prepared escape plan, with two possible
escape routes from every room, and a prearranged meeting place outside
the house. Families should actually run through a fire drill at least
twice a year.
Maintenance Check List
- Test your smoke detector
at least once a month by pressing the test button.
- Replace weak or worn-out
batteries at once.
- Never borrow smoke detector
batteries for other uses.
- Keep extra batteries on
hand.
- Change batteries at least
twice a year.
- Dust and vacuum smoke
detectors at least twice a year.
- Make sure smoke detectors
are working when you return home after an extended absence.
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