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Prime Members: X-Sense XS01-WX Wi-Fi Smoke Alarm Expired

$20
$39.99
+ Free Shipping
+22 Deal Score
28,825 Views
X-Sense US via Amazon offers Prime Members: X-Sense XS01-WX Wi-Fi Smoke Alarm on sale for $19.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member SlickAP for finding this deal.

Product Details:
  • Wi-Fi Connection: Simply connect your alarm to the X-Sense app via a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi network to remotely control it.
  • Self-Check Function: The alarm auto-checks its battery, sensor, and electronics every 60 seconds to ensure proper functioning.
  • Real-Time Notifications: You will receive real-time alerts directly to your smartphone any time a fire starts and the alarm is triggered.
  • Silence at Your Fingertips: Tap the button in the app to silence any alarms without the need to climb a ladder to reach the test/silence button.
  • An insect-proof mesh isolates the sensor from insect interference for accurate, responsive detection.
  • This detector has a slim, contemporary design that can be mounted discreetly on any wall or ceiling.
  • As the battery gets weak, a low battery warning will let you know that it needs to be replaced.
  • 1-Year Warranty / 10-Year Operational Life

Original Post

Written by
Edited October 16, 2023 at 06:10 AM by
X-Sense Smart Smoke Detector Fire Alarm with Replaceable Battery for $19.99 on Amazon [amazon.com]
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Deal
Score
+22
28,825 Views
$20
$39.99

Price Intelligence

Model: X-Sense Smart Smoke Detector Fire Alarm with Replaceable Battery, Wi-Fi Smoke Detector, App Notifications with Optional 24/7 Professional Monitoring Service, XS01-WX, 1-Pack

Deal History 

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Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
05/06/24Amazon$19.99
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11/20/23Amazon$20
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Featured Comments

There are a lot of people who recommend photoelectric (only) smoke detectors. The problem with ionization detectors is they cause a lot of nuisance alarms - and that results in people disconnecting them - either removing batteries from detectors that aren't hard wired, or doing that plus disconnecting hard wired ones.
Here's one clear explanation of the issue: structuretech.com/smoke-alarms-deadly-differences/ (This has a few links to more info at the end of the article.)
https://structuretech.com/wp-cont...-03_11.pdf
http://www.consumerreports.org/ho...106391645/

You could also have mostly photoelectric, but put one or two ionization (or dual) alarms in places where they're not likely to cause nuisance alarms (moisture/smoke in kitchen, and bathroom moisture (in a hallway near the bathroom) can cause the nuisance alarms). The problem with this is that if you have hard-wired alarms, you need to have all the same alarms connected to that system, because having different ones connected in the system can cause their own problems (including nuisance alarms). A way around this is to put photoelectric-only in the system, but buy a battery operated ionization to have outside the system.

Manufacturers are supposed to be developing better detectors that reduce nuisance alarms (was first supposed to be implemented in 2019, but that got delayed; as I understand it, that will involve a different technology so these (when available) will not be labeled as photoelectric and/or ionization). Underwriters Limited developed a new standard, but implementation of that has be postponed several times already. There was a Kidde that initially claimed to meet this newest UL 217 standard (the new standard is UL 217, 8th edition; currently, smoke alarms being sold must meet the 7th edition), but Kidde stopped making that claim, and has no detectors currently that meet it. It seems manufacturers are struggling to meet this standard. (There is a less common manufacturer or two that claimed to meet the newer standard but when I looked at reviews a while ago, I wasn't convinced they were a quality product). Brief overview of 8th edition standard: http://incompliancemag.com/eighth...oke-alarm/, http://www.intertek.com/life-safe...h-edition/

===
I personally don't like the ones with the (supposedly) 10 year lithium battery - if you look at reviews, those batteries fail quite often in under 10 years - and I had this happen with some I purchased. I guess in some places, you can't buy anything else legally, but I'm luckily not in one of those places. Keep your receipt and the box if you buy these, and read the warranty, then try to make a warranty claim if the batter/detector fails.

As a note, manufacturers tend to be very misleading about which edition of the UL 217 standard they meet - often, they just say they meet UL 217 (but not which edition). To make that claim, they need to meet the standard in effect at time of manufacture, but smoke detectors that meet earlier standards can continue to be sold after the current standard is updated, so pay attention to the date of manufacture.

If you live in an area with Menards, they sell a very reasonably priced Kidde photoelectric-only smoke alarm, a little under $15. Ionization alarms tend to be cheaper than photoelectric or dual.

I personally purchase CO detectors as separate items. The digital Nighthawk, that plugs in AND operates with a battery, is my choice. It keeps track of any CO levels over 10 PPM - you can press the peak level button to see that (and reset it to zero. It won't alarm unless the level goes over 50 PPM for a certain amount of time. If you check the peak level every once in a while you may detect a problem problem that isn't yet serious enough to cause an alarm (note that natural gas stoves if not working properly or if they're not vented can generate these lower levels of CO in your house - that can cause health issues and mild headaches, especially for more sensitive or older people or people with respiratory issues.).

Unfortunately, even Underwriter Limited doesn't have really clear info about the new standard and when it's now supposed to be implemented easily found on its website - here are a few links:
ww.ul.com/news/smoke-alarms-and-smoke-detectors-new-and-revised-requirements
http://www.ul.com/news/news-brief...ufacturers

Amazon prices on smoke detectors & CO detectors may go down around Black Friday/cyber monday sales.

Note that you should carefully vacuum around smoke and CO detectors at least a few times annually - maybe even monthly. Dust and bugs and spider webs can all lead to nuisance alarms or failure.

Keep your receipt and info about the warranty - you can make a warranty claim if they fail before they're supposed to. If date of manufacturer is stamped on them (I believe that is now required), you can probably make a warranty claim even if you don't have proof of when you purchased it - but they'll probably start counting the time from date of manufacture rather than date of purchase. You'll likely get a replacement unit, not money refunded.

==
In case anyone has one of these (not-so-common) brands: CPSC Warns Consumers to Immediately Stop Using GLBSUNION and CUZMAK Digital Display Carbon Monoxide Detectors (does not detect CO) - were sold on Amazon; recall from March 2023 http://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/News...Amazon-com

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Joined Jun 2016
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> bubble2 744 Posts
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kwchan79
10-16-2023 at 09:20 AM.
10-16-2023 at 09:20 AM.
which one work well with alexa and hoobs?
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> bubble2 1,051 Posts
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jcvu
10-16-2023 at 09:32 AM.
10-16-2023 at 09:32 AM.
there is a reviewer on Amazon said there is 50 fee per month for using the app. Not sure if that's true or he tried to subscribe to their 24/7 monitor service. Thoughts?
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Panderbear8
10-16-2023 at 09:42 AM.
10-16-2023 at 09:42 AM.
Quote from Redmont :
I would like to get these —especially if the wifi will tell you when the batteries are low —BUT my state requires smoke detectors be BOTH hardwired and have batteries.
You might talk to the inspection department and possibly get away with (1) wired smoke detector and the remaining wireless.
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tinku_grg
10-16-2023 at 09:46 AM.
10-16-2023 at 09:46 AM.
Quote from epor :
I switched to this brand from First Alert after numerous middle of the night nuisance alarms that I think has forever traumatized my 5 year old. Middle of the night alarms appear to be a common problem with First Alert if you read reviews. I now have individual x-sense alarms in each kids rooms, and interconnected alarms for our bedroom and the rest of the house. That way if there is a problem somewhere else in the house (nuisance or not) it will wake us up and hopefully not the kids. I also have a CO detector by xsense in our room.
I have been using these for almost 4 years now without issues!. I guess some of them probably have issues.
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Joined Oct 2012
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> bubble2 50 Posts
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tinku_grg
10-16-2023 at 09:47 AM.
10-16-2023 at 09:47 AM.
The First Alert ones with both CO and Smoke are on sale now on Amazon. But I read in one comment above that they had a lot of false alarms from First Alert. I have been using them for 4 years no issues. Might have gotten lucky 🤪.

Limited-time deal: First Alert Battery Powered Z-Wave Smoke Detector & Carbon Monoxide Alarm, Works with Ring Alarm Base Station, 2nd Generation https://a.co/d/6lXsP50
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Joined Oct 2007
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> bubble2 996 Posts
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Crustan
10-16-2023 at 09:59 AM.
10-16-2023 at 09:59 AM.
Quote from tinku_grg :
The First Alert ones with both CO and Smoke are on sale now on Amazon. But I read in one comment above that they had a lot of false alarms from First Alert. I have been using them for 4 years no issues. Might have gotten lucky 🤪.

Limited-time deal: First Alert Battery Powered Z-Wave Smoke Detector & Carbon Monoxide Alarm, Works with Ring Alarm Base Station, 2nd Generation https://a.co/d/6lXsP50
The newer first alert smoke detectors and CO detectors are total junk. Bought a whole bunch about 2 years ago, and half of them don't even work anymore.
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Joined May 2005
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> bubble2 162 Posts
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fallenturtle
10-16-2023 at 11:32 AM.
10-16-2023 at 11:32 AM.
I literally just got 9 X-sense smoke detectors yesterday and while the price was great, it turns out they aren't UL listed. They claim they are compliant with UL standards, but without actually being tested by UL, these will fail a fire inspection (in the US). My brother is a firefighter and advises against using detectors not UL Listed. The X-sense ones I'll be returning and spending more, unfortunately, to by Kidde brand.
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Last edited by fallenturtle October 16, 2023 at 11:34 AM.

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> bubble2 26 Posts
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CleverCheetah341
10-16-2023 at 01:09 PM.
10-16-2023 at 01:09 PM.
Quote from thegman230 :
How is this brand?
I have these and the carbon monoxide alarm they are fantastic...
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CleverCheetah341
10-16-2023 at 01:10 PM.
10-16-2023 at 01:10 PM.
expired
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> bubble2 1,082 Posts
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KiraOfTheSky
10-16-2023 at 01:10 PM.
10-16-2023 at 01:10 PM.
Could you put the alarm on silent forever and just get a push notification on your phone? I turned my regular fire alarm off due to it going off constantly when I cook.
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Joined Dec 2011
L3: Novice
> bubble2 173 Posts
xdbx
10-16-2023 at 01:20 PM.
10-16-2023 at 01:20 PM.
I bought 3 of these, the hub, and 3 of their water sensors a few months back.. Thankfully haven't had anything "test" the smoke detectors, but the water sensors helped me catch a leak in my utility room well before it became a major problem. Money well spent so far.
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Joined Apr 2016
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> bubble2 1,341 Posts
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StefanoM3235
10-16-2023 at 01:24 PM.
10-16-2023 at 01:24 PM.
Quote from CleverCheetah341 :
expired
I still see $19.90.
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elefante72
10-16-2023 at 01:43 PM.
10-16-2023 at 01:43 PM.
Quote from EliasE9448 :
The state requires that in your own house? Do they come to inspect your home every year?
NYS does and while they do not do yearly inspections every time you get work done or do a permit (I mean legally) they will require you for costly upgrades. I think a year or two ago they now require lithium versions that kill themselves after 10 years. I wonder who lobbied for these customer-friendly changes.

Ironically even if you have hard wired detectors they also want the new lithium ones. I argued for some time on that and told them the CO2 was not hard wired (and it was).

They also require ones (at least in bedrooms) to be tied together.

I feel wifi versions are hilarious. If the power goes off or if there is a fire and your wifi goes off I guess it becomes useless if you don't have full battery backup in the alert chain.

I just stick w/ old school vista 20 panel and hardwired.

Stupid state, I would check if you can tie these together--else they probably run afoul of NYS latest regs.

I'm not against noname Chinese companies but this is a highly regulated industry, and the last thing is I want the state or worse the insurance company to come up w/ some reason not to pay out so I would check w/ your local jurisdiction first before buying this stuff.
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Last edited by elefante72 October 16, 2023 at 01:52 PM.
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jasonfoxfire
10-16-2023 at 02:02 PM.
10-16-2023 at 02:02 PM.
Watch out for battery life! You may have to replace battery every year when it starts beeping some random time.
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> bubble2 1,203 Posts
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rizorith
10-16-2023 at 03:34 PM.
10-16-2023 at 03:34 PM.
Quote from Crustan :
The newer first alert smoke detectors and CO detectors are total junk. Bought a whole bunch about 2 years ago, and half of them don't even work anymore.

I just.tossed my last one over the weekend. False armed and would not shut off so I had to deactivate it. The other two were false alarming at night intermittently. I bit the bullet and got the nest ones. At least I can turn it off with an app.
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