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Real Estate News and Advice |
October 6, 2008 |
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Did You Buy The Right Smoke Alarm?
by PJ Wade
Did you buy Underwriters Laboratories of Canada-approved smoke alarms to ensure your family's safety? Do you have both types of smoke detectors ready to protect you and your home? "Investigations into home fire deaths very often find that a smoke alarm did not sound," explains Canada Safety Council (CSC) president Emile Therien. "It may have been disconnected or not in working order. The batteries may have been dead, or someone may have taken them out." Or maybe it was the wrong type of smoke alarm. Different types of smoke alarms detect different sorts of fires. For maximum protection, you should have at least one of each type of alarm - ionization and photoelectric - on every level of your home. Ionization-type smoke alarms are the first to respond to fast flaming fires that consume combustible materials quickly and spread rapidly. These fires generate a lot of heat, but little smoke. Cooking fat or grease, the most common causes of home fires, create fast flaming fires as do flammable liquids, newspapers, paint, and cleaning solutions. Since ionization-type smoke alarms typically respond to fast flaming fires, they are best suited for rooms and areas which contain highly combustible materials like kitchens, workrooms, home offices, basement storage areas, and garages. Slow smoldering fires trigger photoelectric smoke alarms. These are the alarms that can be such a nuisance in kitchens and hallways where the smoke from burning toast or frying food sets them off. This frustration factor often causes the alarms to be dismantled to keep the peace, a serious lapse in judgement. Smouldering fires produce a lot of smoke but little flame or heat. They may smoulder for hours in large pieces of furniture such as a couch, mattress, or counter top before bursting into flame. Photoelectric alarms should be placed in or near living rooms, bedrooms and kitchens. Smoke alarms have been credited with bringing the number of people that die in Canadian home fires down to about 400 each year. But that is still too many preventable deaths. A fully-charged a smoke alarm can scream the warning of fire that provides precious seconds for an escape to safety. Fire safety isn't accidental. Following these tips will ensure a safe home:
For more fire safety information: Canada Safety Council, Ottawa, Phone 613-739-1535 (after hours 613-737-4965) or email csc@safety.council.org. The website is http://www.safety-council.org Or contact your local firestation. Published: May 11, 1999 Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws.
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