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green-foam

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Posts posted by green-foam

  1. You have several options to dispose of old fire extinguishers.

    1) Find a re cycling centre that will take them (Not just your local tip, although some will take them)

    2) If they are discharged and small you can put them in the normal waste.

    3) If they are still full there are specialist companies who will take them away for processing.

    4) Advertise them on an auction website for COLLECTION ONLY. There is an interest in old extinguishers.

  2. I presume you mean smoke alarm? (There is a great deal of difference between a smoke alarm and a fire alarm)

    I would suggest you install an optical smoke alarm which you interlink with other smoke alarms in your house.

    If you already have interlinked smoke alarms in your house, you will need another one which is compatible with what you already have.

    If you do not have any smoke alarms in the house now would be a good time to install interlinked alarms. The reason being, If a fire should develop in the loft you may not hear the smoke alarm for a while, where as if you have interlinked alarms you will know within seconds since they will all sound.

    Safelincs can supply you with interlinked smoke alarms

  3. I think you need to clarify what is there.

    If the property has "domestic smoke alarms" these can not be "connected to the fire brigade"

    If the property has a "Fire alarm" Then this can be "connected to the fire brigade"

    However, I should point out that no alarm is connected directly to the fire brigade, instead it calls an Alarm Receiving Centre who will if appropriate call the fire brigade. In order to have this, the fire alarm must be up to the relevant standards and have a maintenance contract.

    Would it not be up to the new owners which insurance company they have and therefore up to the new insurance company what the fire alarm does or doesn't do.

  4. Does not sound like it is a smoke alarm, since it makes a noise every ten minutes. I would suggest being very quiet and listening for the noise and "follow it". Yes it is easy to say, but it can not be a smoke alarm with no power. I wonder is it an old mobile phone?

  5. Following on from what Tom says, I should like to point out that although ideally an electrician should install the smoke alarms, not all electricians are Part P registered. So although any electrician can install them, not all electricians can issue a certificate that says the work complies with Part P.

  6. If there is an electrical failure after the 3 hour test, and all the lights passed the test what will you do? The batteries need 24 hours to fully recharge, you can not really stay in a building for 24 hours watching ..........

    Ideally the test should be carried out at a time when the building will be empty for the next 24 hours.

  7. Is it ok to put upvc blinds iin front of a fire exit door,the blind/curtains are 200m in width and 2m in hight and multi colour

    The fire exits are to be used by children

    I honestly think that it is a typo. That would be some blind that is 200 m wide.

    But I have to agree with Tom regarding covering the fire exit. Think about it, if there is a fire, people panic, and will not see that there is a blind covering an exit, also the blind could get in peoples way. and if the fire exits are "to be used by children" how does everyone else get out?

  8. Fire extinguishers should be checked annually. Every 5 years, all but CO2 extinguishers should be discharged tested, checked and refilled, CO2 it is 10 years at which time it should also be stretch tested.

    I should also point out that as an extinguisher gets older, it will become more expensive to service and may be un-economical to do so, since a new extinguisher from safelincs CLICK HERE is cheaper.

  9. There are a couple of problems with any type of adhesive fixing.

    1) When you have to take the fixed item down, you find it is still stuck to the surface and will not move without damaging the surface to which it is fixed.

    2) Any self adhesive tape etc will after time "dry out" and have no adhesion.

    I would suggest that you use "hollow wall" fixings, which you can get at any D.I.Y, store.

    I personally like these, Click here

    In your case, when its time to change the detectors you can undo the bolts (With a screwdriver) take the detector down, put the bolts through the new detector and tighten the bolts up, securing the new detector. No damage caused to anything.

  10. All mains devices require an earth / earth termination point, UNLESS it is double insulated, which I doubt the smoke detectors are.

    It has to be there, but you don't use it, it is if some one should sever the cable, instead of the electricity flowing through the person who cut the cable, with possible lethal results, it flows to earth. (yes it will go bang, but its better that than to be.............

    Also as I first said, you should

    NEVER interlink mains smoke detectors that are from different makers.

    You do not know what damage may occur.

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