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DATE | 2015-03-22 |
FROM | Rick Moen
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SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] in the hands of god, we are all...
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Quoting Ruben Safir (mrbrklyn-at-panix.com):
> I'm relly struggling right now with funerals and kernels, but I thought > that it would be obvious that the reason for an off button was so you > could turn it off.... like when you are COOKING, and then turn it ON... > say like when you are sleeping and need extra protection.
This isn't an answer to my question.
> It is about bending the device to the WILL of the user so that the user > doesn't use the thing like a frizbee because he didn't get layed the > night before and is hung over when the thing goes off after his toast is > burnt?
This isn't an answer to my question.
> Nuh? > > In houses the overwhelming number of deaths happen at night when people > are asleep...
Correct.
> So you make it a routine. Turn off the lights, lock the door, turn on > the fire detector?
(Smoke detector, not fire detector.)
No.
You don't actually have a need to turn off the smoke detector at all, at any time, as far as I can tell. Moving the one nearest the kitchen (while cooking) a bit lower so that it stops complaining suffices, or in extreme cases opening a window for a while.
If there's a scenario that makes switching them off, let alone switching off _every single one_ in a house, a sensible plan of action, I haven't yet heard it.
I've asked, and you've consistently ignored my question and hyperventilated with the usual, please to excuse the expression, smokescreen.
If you ever feel like addressing the question, I'm still here.
> First Alert Model No SC9120B
http://www.amazon.com/SC9120B-Hardwire-Combination-Monoxide-Battery/dp/B000HEC4EO
Docs claim this is supposed to be an AC-powered combo smoke/CO2 detector, with a 9V battery as failover power. We've just talked on the telephone, and say your particular unit lacks terminal connectors in the battery compartment, hence yours ends up being AC-only with _no_ failover during power outages.
Which suggests that the First Alert model SC9120B is a _very_ badly designed unit for starters, and that yours is somehow defective from the factory: Badly designed because plugging into AC limits where you can place it and gives you a disincentive to annually replace the battery. Defective because, without terminals and wires, the intended battery-failover function obviously cannot work at all.
To save time: You said one of your places is (was?) an apartment, and the other is (was?) a house, and that NYC regulation requires that apartments deploy smoke detectors from an approved list of models. If I lived in an apartment and the legally-mandated model was crap, I'd replace it with a non-crap approved model if any exists. If all of the approved models were crap, I'd replace it with a non-crap substitute outside the approved list and hide the evidence.
In a house, I'd just summarily toss the crud smoke detector and get a reasonable non-AC replacement.
Having five smoke detectors, as the building-management firm doubtless ensured for my family house while it was a rental property between 1966 and 2006, strikes me as excessive. One near the kitchen and one in living space might be (minimally) enough redundancy -- though three is probably better insurance for the same reasons that _all_ of you domain owners make sure you have minimum three, maximum seven authoritative nameservers the way RFC2182 section 5 recommends.
( Of course, many of you habitually get by on _two_ because you are feeling lucky and because you ignore standards written by the people who engineered DNS in the first place -- which negligence you'll get away with until, of course, suddenly you don't.)
By the way, is there a reason why you quote my _entire_ prior post including all the parts you're ignoring and not even pretending to respond to? Can I interest you in some good open-source MUA software for Linux? Or would you consider trimming quotations to just what you're responding to, the way old-school Unix users expect?
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