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OopsNote that it isn’t a CO2 alarm. It’s CO, important!
Tony
They have an expiry date on them. They normally last 10 years.Hi folks, which is the best a combined alarm or separate ones and the best place to put them , have a combined one ATM on the ceiling by the kitchen which is 3years old now so maybe time to change .
Not sure I see the point of a thermo alarm in a motorhome, if you haven’t noticed the temperature has risen to 58°C you have probably already been overcome by fumes. I have an optical smoke alarm and cooking has never set it off. I would rather have a few false alarms than miss the early warning a smoke alarm gives.We have two separate ones. A thermo one for fire as it’s less prone to cooking set offs placed on the ceiling in the fwd part of lounge area. The CO alarm is by our bed which is over the cab. Both by fire angel.
Looks like I edited too much out of my post when re writing the first partNot sure I see the point of a thermo alarm in a motorhome, if you haven’t noticed the temperature has risen to 58°C you have probably already been overcome by fumes. I have an optical smoke alarm and cooking has never set it off. I would rather have a few false alarms than miss the early warning a smoke alarm gives.
Not heard of these before but having done a quick search I like the idea. The optical sensitivity is increased if the alarm detects a sudden rise in temperature.Looks like I edited too much out of my post when re writing the first part
I have a thermally enhanced optical detector.![]()
This current one is only 4 years old and started making some strange chirps. I contacted fire angel and they are replacing it free of charge.Not heard of these before but having done a quick search I like the idea. The optical sensitivity is increased if the alarm detects a sudden rise in temperature.
FireAngel say CO alarms should be positioned above the height of any openings such as doors but more than 150mm below ceiling level. I can’t see any way of achieving this in a Converted Panel Van but the air volume is so small compared to a house I just hope that it would detect the problem before I was overcome.You want your carbon monoxide detectors low down
I make sure to replace all the batteries in my house and van alarms between Christmas and New Year, that way I don't forget.I spent a while researching various options and really wanted something that could take a permanent 12v feed but that would also charge from that 12v power source to give a battery backup.
The problem with the generic supermarket ones that take AA batteries is that they could sit and beep away for days on end to warn me of low battery but as the van isn't in daily use I could easily miss that and never know...
I hadn't really found anything that would do that, other than some cheap 'aliexpress' style devices which I really didn't trust and then someone on a different forum put up for sale a set of smoke/carbon monoxide alarms with WiFi integration from X-Sense.
This system allows you to place multiple sensors in different areas. You want your carbon monoxide detectors low down and your smoke detectors high up but if your motorhome has 'rooms' then you could place sensors in each and get that early warning that might make a difference.
So far I've only bench tested it as my PVC is still more PV than anything else! but it does look like a good system.