jar546
CBO
In your jurisdiction, when does your codes (not your opinion) trigger the necessity to hard wire smoke detectors in a single family dwelling or townhouse?
They make battery wireless interconnected smoke detectors
We must not be looking at the same code book. Where is this Bluetooth slave verbiage at?Alternate means and methods - Bluetooth or wireless smokes are available. The master can be hardwired and the slaves monitored by the master hardwired smokes.
The IRC requires the smoke detectors installed to be maintained in accordance with the codes they were installed. Therefore, if a smoke detector was not replaced every ten years and a permit is pulled, the lone smoke detector in the hallway was not maintained and the smoke detectors must be upgraded....... If you must install smokes, placement must be in accordance with current codes. Therefore, hardwired master with Bluetooth slaves is acceptable and enhances life safety as the codes require,
Wireless interconnection is great but the code requires 110 power source to each unit. Individually.
2. Hard wiring of smoke alarms in existing areas shall not be required where the alterations or repairs do not result in the removal of interior wall or ceiling finishes exposing the structure, unless there is an attic, crawl space or basement available which could provide access for hard wiring without the removal of interior finishes.
New construction yes hardwired 110 volt power source with battery backup
Existing residential not required if the power is no accessible
Built a home with high ceilings, within a month of moving in the owner called yelling about batteries going off, sent an electrician over with a 16' step ladder to change backup batteries, a month later they were going off again. Finally the owner bought a 16' step ladder starting to change them himself, the last time I was by there he had all smokes down on a table with wires sticking out of them, I asked him what he was doing he said trying to figure out how to disable the battery backups. The odds of a homeowner falling off the top of a 16' step ladder are a lot higher than any fire ever happening, I thought that once we got hard-wired smokes that batteries going off would be history, best thing to do is just throw them away.
For safety reasons no smoke detector should be located higher than 6' off the floor, in an area where building inspectors are not allowed to climb ladders we are making homeowners climb ladders. In a home with a 150KW Cummins Genset why do codes make us install battery backups anyway?
Built a home with high ceilings, within a month of moving in the owner called yelling about batteries going off, sent an electrician over with a 16' step ladder to change backup batteries, a month later they were going off again. Finally the owner bought a 16' step ladder starting to change them himself, the last time I was by there he had all smokes down on a table with wires sticking out of them, I asked him what he was doing he said trying to figure out how to disable the battery backups. The odds of a homeowner falling off the top of a 16' step ladder are a lot higher than any fire ever happening, I thought that once we got hard-wired smokes that batteries going off would be history, best thing to do is just throw them away.
For safety reasons no smoke detector should be located higher than 6' off the floor, in an area where building inspectors are not allowed to climb ladders we are making homeowners climb ladders. In a home with a 150KW Cummins Genset why do codes make us install battery backups anyway?
The odds of a homeowner falling off the top of a 16' step ladder are a lot higher than any fire ever happening,
I thought the great state of ex-brown-moonbeam
Started requireing 10 year batteries ?
May be for safety and energy consumption the code should have a maximum 8 ft ceiling height for a residence.Built a home with high ceilings,
Sloped or flat ceilings?
This is a dilemma that my AHJ has not been able to deal with. There's probably a dozen "policies". I know that we don't pay any heed to the part about hard-wiring existing dwellings if there is an attic or crawl space....well we get that on complete rewire jobs but not much else. The dwelling pretty much has to be gutted before that's included.
I know what the code requires....there is an obvious path to requiring hard wired alarms on almost every permitted job.....we just ignore that....The backlash is greater than our resolve. I get it....hard wiring alarms is an expensive proposition that people are not prepared for.
Ya and some people really don’t want them.....it’s a huge PTA. Contractors never mention this to the owners so when I show up for a final inspection, seldom do I find compliant smoke and CO alarms. They learn that there’s another $100 to spend.Because nobody wants them.