Product Dimensions : |
5.7 x 5.7 x 2 inches; 2.58 Pounds |
---|---|
Item model number : |
Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Detector |
Batteries : |
2 Lithium Metal batteries required. (included) |
Date First Available : |
April 18, 2023 |
Manufacturer : |
X-Sense |
ASIN : |
B0BZR9GFKQ |
Country of Origin : |
China |
Best Sellers Rank: |
#6 in Smoke & Carbon Monoxide Alarms |
Customer Reviews: |
485 ratings |
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Amazon Customer –
Easy to install. Know they work. When the grand kids came home from school that afternoon they smoked the popcorn at their house. That incident passed the test. The two connected alarms went off as well. Nice knowing that their home is protected.
Vince317 –
I installed these in strategic areas of my home, a small ranch style home. One at the bottom of my stairway to the cellar, one in the area above the stairs but in front of the door to the basement (about 12′ apart) and the final one in the hallway. I tested each one as installed them and they sure are plenty loud and can clearly hear each one anywhere in my home. They do not however alarm simultaneously. I went through the pairing process and it seems successful even though they were supposed to already been paired because they came in a 3 pack. I believe that my test may be the problem but, in my case, it will not matter because of my small home I will be alerted no matter what one goes off!
Dendy –
Installed three of these in my home. One in bedroom, one in hall way, and one in basement. These were very easy to set up and install. If one unit detects smoke or a dangerous level of carbon monoxide it will alarm with different tones for each threat and relays the alert to any other detectors installed. It has a display for CO level led lights for operation and alerts. More detectors can be added at any time. Says 10 year no fuss battery installed after which it alerts and quits working.
sher in MO –
Fire Department suggested the combo, 10 yr detectors. I found these on Amazon at a reasonable price and had installed.
wgs –
This product works good as described.
JAMES OBRIEN –
Nicely packaged, easily installed.
Hugh Macdonald –
Includes screws and inserts for mounting in plaster or drywall walls. You need to use a drill and 1/4″ bit and need to have a stud sensor or know where you have studs. I mounted into the plaster ceiling in one spot and a wall above door level in another. Because the height is important it is a little hard to press the RESET or TEST button when it is on the ceiling or high on a wall. I’m tall but I used a chair. You first mount a base ring with 3 screws and then twist the actual device into the base. When you twist it in, it automatically turns it on. Imprinted on the unit is a message, “once ON it cannot be turned off”, although you can later remove the unit. It was difficult to know where the “bottom” is on the base so that when the unit is inserted it will be oriented upright. When activated LEDs show if there is fire or CO and the LCD illuminates to show the CO level, although the LCD is a little hard to read since it is pretty small. However, if you have a real alarm you won’t take the time to read it or if you do, you can see that it is not 0. The alarm for CO needs a two or three digit number and you can tell 30 or 40 or 400 because of multiple digits. Having a 10 year battery is very nice — no yearly replacement of a 9v battery. Officially you are supposed to press the TEST button every week. The set of 3 comes already sync’d with each other so you are not supposed to have to do the step to radio connect them all together. When one alarms the others also do. However, to find out which unit is the triggering one requires a certain procedure that is a little confusing. I may write some instruction nearby to remind myself.
Plantgrrl –
It’s been a few months since I got these, but I’m just here to tell you the future is now. Replaced all our detectors with x-sense wireless meshed smoke/carbon monoxide detectors. They have a 10 year lithium battery, which is the useful life of a smoke detector. If the battery dies, it’s time for a new unit. They can be disarmed (in the even of false alarm) or tested with the optional wireless remote (honestly, this was a major selling point for me, so not optional IMO).The closest one beeps first, and then the rest go off too. If there is a legit fire (that isn’t large enough to see yet) you can also use it to disarm all but the one detecting the fire, so you know which room it’s in. So now I can position the detectors where they belong–on the ceiling and at least 2-ish feet from a wall.With very tall ceilings in parts of my victorian house, proper mounting appears to have been a challenge not worth conquering for previous owners. But! No more! They are now where they should be to prevent false positives!Just saying. Never changing a smoke detector battery again AND getting the optional remote. This is the kind of tech I can get behind!
JayW1948 –
Several years ago I replaced the original smoke detector (30+ years old) in my house. I purchased a quality hardwired model from Lowe’s. It was overly sensitive. The detector was located in the hallway around the corner from the living room and if I turned on the gas logs in the living room it would go off. It would go off sometimes if the oven was on and the kitchen is around a corner from the hallway. It was VERY annoying. Since replacing it with this one I have had no problems. It uses a photo sensor rather than an ionization sensor. I would recommend it.
B. Hunt –
Well I got to test these out recently. Had something get on the burner of our oven and for all purposes we had a small fire. They all triggered and were quite loud.I do like that for all the smoky cooking that was done it wasn’t until we really had a smoke filled fire that this is the first time it went off. I have had some other styles and even the smallest amount of frying would set them off these don’t seem to be sensitive to that.One downside is they don’t seem to silence. If you do have a small fire or a lot of smoke the silence button only quiets the one unit and only for a few minutes. You will have to take these down and move them to fresh air. You maybe able to turn them off? I wasn’t sure the instructions made it pretty clear once you install them they are on for roughly 10 years.Which brings us to the other gripe : If you are like me and hate the beeping enough that you have avoided using fire alarms for fear of the battery going dead at an odd hour. The 10 years is an up too 10 years. I hope to sell this house before they need to be replaced, but probably plan on replacing them at 5-10 years. I really do like that you don’t have to do the once a year battery dance, but according to the instructions these will beep when the battery gets low exactly what I was trying to avoid by getting the 10 year.