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First Alert SMI100 Battery-Operated Smoke Alarm Expired

$10.65
$17.78
+51 Deal Score
45,312 Views
Update: This popular deal is still available for purchase at the listed prices.

Amazon has First Alert Smoke Alarm on sale below for when you 'clip' the 40% Off Coupon on product page. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Community Member phoinix for sharing this deal
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Original Post

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Edited April 25, 2024 at 09:12 AM by
Amazon [amazon.com] has First Alert Smoke Alarm for $16.99 - 40% when you 'clip' the coupon on product page = $10.20. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.Price:
$6.80 lower (40% savings) than the list price of $17
40% coupon applied to one item per order at checkout
To check eligibility and activate coupon click here [amazon.com].

Customer reviews:
4.7⭐ / 22 global ratings
200+ bought in past month

amazon.com/dp/B0CJMP7WHH [amazon.com] Now $10.47

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Score
+51
45,312 Views
$10.65
$17.78
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Community Wiki

Last Edited by lazzlazz April 16, 2024 at 09:07 AM
If you have hardwired alarms, it's best to have the same model for all, otherwise you can get unexplained alarms going off.

Vacuum out your alarms every 6 months (or more often if you have a lot of dust or spiders). Debris building up inside them can cause them to fail or alarms to go off inexplicably. If you're remodeling or doing something that will create a lot of dust, remove the alarm temporarily.

Ionization alarms are the ones that cause a lot of nuisance alarms (the ionization only alarms are the ones that tend to be dirt-cheap). Some have started recommending photoelectric only (or mostly photoelectric only and maybe one combined photoelectric/ionization). Keep ionization alarms out of areas near the kitchen and bathrooms (moisture from bathrooms can set the alarm off).

Buying CO monitors separate from fire alarms means that if one alarm mechanism goes bad, you don't have to replace the whole thing. Unfortunately, some states now require them to be combined - but if you own your own house, you can do what you want (unless you give an inspector some reason to require you meet the regulation, like remodeling).

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Featured Comments

The 10 year smoke alarms will not last 10 years. I bought a bunch for a new house and had to replace the majority within 3 years.
On the flip side of that, we bought all new ten- year alarms just about six years ago, and they're all doing fine.
These have a manufacturer's warranty of 10-years.

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Joined Dec 2014
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> bubble2 129 Posts
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jj2000
04-28-2024 at 04:21 AM.
04-28-2024 at 04:21 AM.
Can't find coupon; appears dead.
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Joined Oct 2010
Live Free or Move
> bubble2 29,296 Posts
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Medic311
04-28-2024 at 01:43 PM.
04-28-2024 at 01:43 PM.
Quote from TRNT :
when i read your comment i felt that for some reason using rechargeables is wrong. so i googled it:

Most alarm manufacturers like First Alert recommend against using rechargeable batteries to power your alarm. Rechargeable batteries lose charge faster and have a shorter runtime than standard batteries. The NFPA requires a standard amount of backup time that rechargeable batteries don't offer.
this is correct. the way the voltage depletes is not good with detectors
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