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Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
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Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr
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Vendor
First Alert

First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr

4.4
Regular price
€91,00
Sale price
€91,00
Regular price
€150,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€59,00)
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.

  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • Keep your family safe with this talking hardwired smoke and carbon monoxide alarm; it's equipped with voice and location, so you are alerted of the danger and where it originates from across your house
  • Tells you whether the danger is smoke or carbon monoxide and where the threat is among up to 11 pre programmed locations in your home
  • Features electrochemical Carbon Monoxide sensing technology and photoelectric smoke sensor optimized to detect larger smoke particles produced by smoldering fires; helps minimize the number of false alarms
  • Can connect to other compatible BRK or First Alert detectors, to ensure all alarms will sound when threat is detected
  • 10 year limited warranty; equipped with end of life signal chirp, so you know when it's time to replace the unit for your safety
  • Rigorously tested to meet UL standards
  • NOTE:Kindly refer to the user manual provided as a PDF manual in the product description section

Shipping and Returns

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  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
  • Customers are advised to read our return policy for details of the return process, eligibility, refunds as well as cancellations or exchanges.
  • In case of any issues or concerns about Shipping or Returns, please contact us and we will be happy to help.

Customer Reviews

I thought it would be a great safety feature to hear which room a fire was ...BE AWARE - ROOM NAME IS ONLY ANNOUNCED ON THE TRIGGERED ALARM,. ROOM NAME IS NOT RELAYED TO OTHER VOICE-ENABLED ALARMSI installed these alarms in five rooms of a three-story house using the existing interconnected alarm hard wiring. I followed the instructions to assign a room name to each alarm ("Basement", "Living Room", "Child's Bedroom", etc.). I thought it would be a great safety feature to hear which room a fire was detected in from any of the voice alarms in the house, especially if I was on the top floor and the basement alarm went off.When I tested each alarm, the other connected alarms also went off as expected, but they only announced "Fire!" and "Carbon Monoxide!", not the room name of the triggered alarm. The only alarm that announced the room name was the triggered alarm. This makes no sense to me, as a voice feature with room name capability seems useless if it doesn't send the room name to other voice-enabled alarms.BRK support was very helpful and said that this was how the alarm was designed to operate. They said they have a voice-enabled alarm (SCO500) that can send room name info to the other alarms, but it is battery powered only, not hard-wired. They said I would have to buy an optional power adapter (SA520) for each alarm. However, this would not allow me to mix some of my older hard-wired alarms on the same interconnect (as the SC7010BV did) - John1I would give zero stars if I couldDO NOT BUY THESE ALARMS. I bought eight of them. Four hundred dollars of useless trash. Constant false alarms and company doesn't even know their own products. Their tech support directly contradicts the instructions for my smoke alarm. I just had to have my wife turn off the breaker and yank every one of these of the ceiling and take the battery out because it kept alarming. Their tech support refuse to replace or refund. I have a clean house and I've tried blowing these out with canned air. My five year old lives in fear of the alarms going off. Amazon should pull this product. It is absolute trash and unreliable!!1just like others have postedThis alarm wakes us all up in the middle of the night repeatedly, just like others have posted. We blow them out with compressed air, we vacuum them, Installed by pro electrician. Checked by another.We keep replacing them even after the 'recall', but if you read this, just try a different brandI tried calling to get free replacements and was told they were out of warranty.$50 detector that needs replacement every 2 years? Also needs to be cared for and still keeps you awake?Go elsewhere.1Easy to replace These things are apparently programmed from the factory to go off only in the middle of the night. The beeping is just loud enough that you can't just sleep through it. And the darn beeping occurs with too much of a delay so that when you do get up to find it, it takes way too long in the middle of the night to triangulate and figure out which one you have to take down so that you can go back to sleep and deal with it in the morning. It's like some torture game of hide and seek. By the time you figure out which one is malfunctioning, you've been awake and annoyed long enough that you're pretty much now wide awake. Is it some kind of North Korean/Russian plot to destroy the lives of normal mundane US citizens through intermittent sleep deprivation? First the election, now this.One chirp every 3-4 minutes means that the 9V back up battery is dead. Three chirps that go off every 3-4 minutes indicates that the detector as a whole is malfunctioning. Replacing the battery doesn't do anything. I've tried dusting them out with an air gun but usually doesn't work. Most authorities recommend replacing these things about ever 5-10 yrs or so. So far, about 5 years is about how long these have lasted in my house, and over the past several months I've been replacing one after the other. I've lost enough sleep on random nights over the past several weeks that I'm just going to replace all the rest of the ones in my house and just move on with my life.As a bonus annoying factor, the 9V battery lasts about 4 yrs. I just went through and replaced all the batteries less than 9 months ago, and now I'm going around replacing the whole darn thing. So that was a nice waste of money, especially since the new detectors come with new 9V batteries and now I have a small stockpile of partially used 9V batteries.The only good thing is that they are easy to replace, and much cheaper on Amazon than the local brick and mortar stores. And thankfully, I haven't had one go off because of a house fire or carbon monoxide buildup, so I can't comment on their effectiveness, but I guess it's one of those things you just have to assume will work when it needs to... like the airbag in your car. 4Lots of design faultsThe good: this product uses the same interconnection cable as the other models of First Alert/BRK fire alarms so no rewiring was neededThe bad: I agree with the other reviews -- this unit needs a "quiet mode" when attempting to program it -- standing on a ladder with your head a couple feet from it to program it while its blaring loud is super annoying. Our previous smoke alarm died in the middle of the night (5 yrs old and randomly making three chips during the night) so I decided to install this unit in the middle of the night while the family was sleeping (to stop the chirping of the other unit). Immediately when I turned on the circuit breaker it started loudly announcing itself and asking to be programmed. When I removed the plastic tab from the battery compartment to activate the 2xAA batteries but the unit kept insisting (and announcing) "low battery" for a while until I removed and reinstalled the batteries. Lastly, this company changed the mounting ring size and inside thread so this isn't a simple remove old unit and install new unit -- instead we need to remove the entire old ring, and touch up the ceiling's texture and paint and install the new ring. The old and new ring inside mounting thread is ALMOST similar enough to mount the new unit, but there was a minor change so the new unit doesn't fully snap in (but its close enough that 3/4th of the sides of the unit can thread in and we were able to get it to temporarily sit in the old ring - partially loose). I understand the smaller outside diameter of the new ring might be for a cleaner look/feel, but its disappointing they couldn't maintain compatibility with mounting this unit in an old ring for those who want to simply replace/upgrade.2Replace All of my First Alerts With the Nest Aware. I was a volunteer fire chief for almost 25 years so I am knowledgeable about these devices. I purchased a new construction home in 2012 and these were installed by the builder. About 6 months ago, I started getting the dread "3 chirp" alert, of course around midnight. Replaced in with a new unit and all is well. Long story short, within the past 2 weeks, I had two more units going dead, signaled by the 3 chirps. I contacted First Alert and followed their instructions (blew them out, reset, etc.) and good for a day or two, then the 3 chirps again.I am a gadget guy and received a Nest Aware for a gift last year and loved it. Made the decision to spend 3X the cost of the First Alert and replace them with the Nest Aware as they die off. Yes, I could easily replace the First Alert every 5 years and save the money, but the hassle is not worth it. The Nest is a far superior product. 3Constant false alarmsTwo separate iterations of this model gave off false alarms at 2 AM when windows were opened during a heatwave and at 10 AM when they were closed, same heatwave; and could not be easily reset unless you turned off the power, took out the batteries, reinstalled them, and walked the unit through the test procedure. Even when reset, they went off again. Both were installed by an electrician in a location where the Kidde alarm we were replacing did not false alarm in more than ten years. Consumer Reports has reviewed a comparable model and concluded that the Con was: Too Sensitive. Indeed. It fires from the fine particles of summer dust and even from smoke blowing up from California wildfires hundreds of miles south of here. First Alert's default solution is to conclude that if a unit continually mis-alarms, it must be in the wrong location. In our case, moving the location would require rewiring into the ceiling of the room in question and it was a suitable location for a different model for years. If you disable the one, the other two on the same circuit in other rooms stop working. Electrician has verified this circuit has proper voltage and is not "noisy." So we've put on the dust cover and will see if it can make it through the night when the weather changes and the windows are always closed. Too sensitive is the wrong metric for a smoke alarm. It makes people crazy and they tend to disable the thing rather than troubleshoot. Not good for consumer safety. Sorry we switched from Kidde.1Stops false alarms from cooking things in the kitchen! This is the ONLY smoke detector that won't give false alarms in the kitchen! If your smoke alarms go off when you cook, you *need* a photoelectric alarm.I tried 2 different ones from the store besides the one that came with my house, all used ionizing radiation to detect fires (the most common technology). One was even a $50 model that said it had some intelligent way of reducing false alarms....in all cases, the smoke detectors would infallibly go off if I tried cooking a large package of bacon. They went off for other things too, but bacon was the sure-fire way to set them off. So, obviously, I put this to the test with bacon. To the dismay of my family's arteries, I cooked three entire packages in a row and even had the fan above the stove off. This thing didn't go off at all. I've had it in place for about 2 months now since and it has only gone off once - when I made it go off by intentionally burning a small piece of wood near it to ensure it wasn't defective.EDIT: Make that 4 months now! And it just passed the entire-day-of-Thanksgiving-cooking test! Normally we'd automatically take down the old fire alarm on Thanksgiving day but this sucker didn't go off even once! ...Thank you! 5False alarms!These alarms were installed in a brand new construction home. They were paired with BRK/First Alert Photoelectric smoke alarms for a total of 11 units. They were super easy to install and worked silently...for about 2 weeks. First, the alarms would randomly chirp 3 times once or twice per day. Then they started going off for no reason. Now I don't know if you've ever been sleeping in a home when 11 different smoke alarms/ carbon monoxide detectors go off, but I wouldn't recommend it! It's not fun! The alarms would sound for about 15 seconds and then stop so we did t even have time to run around and figure out which alarm was causing all the ruckus. Today the alarms went off again but this time they didn't stop. I ran around hitting silence buttons but they still didn't stop. None of the alarms was showing that it was the culprit and none of the silence buttons worked. After 5 LOOOOOONG minutes of screaming and running around frantically trying to stop the madness, we started to yank the alarms off the ceiling. I was livid!!!! I called First Alert and they offered to send me ONE replacement unit but it was up to me to decide which one had malfunctioned. Then I asked how to silence them the next time this happens since the buttons didn't work. I was told to get on a ladder with a hair dryer on the cool setting and blow air into each and every smoke alarm until they stop. REALLY????????? You want me to do that at 3:30 in the morning when I'm trying to decide if I need to evacuate my family or if it's just cheaply built smoke alarms creating a false alarm???? That's the protocol for unusable smoke alarms? Do yourself a favor and avoid First Alert like the plague. I'm currently shopping for new smoke alarms....after less that a month of usage in my brand new home. I just don't trust them to work when/if I truly have a disastourous situation in my home.1False alerts after only two months in use.Bought and installed this unit July 20, 2016 to replace an identical one that started giving false alerts after 7 years in use. This one started falsely alerting just after two months in use. Went on Amazon to see if I could get a replacement but it says that the return window of opportunity closed on August 19th, 2016. So after two months of use I have a useless smoke detector. Going to look for another manufacturer whose product will be compatible and more reliable. (and yes, the manufacture date for this one is showing as 2016)1Decent device but no longer recommended I guess this is an adequate smoke/CO detector. These came with the new house in '11, and when I had one go bad, I just went for the quick fix and bought exactly the same model as the one being replaced. But I wouldn't do that again. I'm transitioning from these ionization detectors to a compatible photoelectric device (SC7010B). While ionization detectors are good in certain settings, they have two big problems that make them unsuitable for homes: (1) They're far more prone to nuisance alarms that condition people to ignore them, and (2) they're much slower to alarm in a smoldering fire with a lot of smoke, the very kind of fire that's most common in homes. That's why experts no longer recommend the use of ionization detectors in homes; they recommend only photoelectric alarms. And in case you're wondering--no, don't even THINK about a combination ionization/photoelectric device! They're virtually worthless, and I'm surprised they're still sold. First Alert/BRK is a good brand, and their photoelectric smoke detectors are perfect for residential settings.One more note: Whether or not you're getting a malfunction notification or end-of-life signal, you should replace ALL of your smoke detectors every six to eight years. All smoke detectors start to degrade after five years, and by year ten, you just can't trust them anymore with your and your family's safety. Half don't work, and the other half don't work well enough. Never wait ten years to replace all smoke alarms. Six or seven years is best; eight is okay, but anything more than eight is far too risky. 3False alarms teach children to ignore fire.We purchased six of these alarms in December. Since then, two of them have malfunctioned - in both cases, due to steam or humidity, and in the most recent case, at 1:30am when my children were fast asleep. Picture, if you will, a frantic mother and her children standing on the sidewalk in our PJs in 32F weather - no shoes, no coat, because we are teaching the toddlers to GET OUT OF THE HOUSE and nuance will have to come later - while the children shriek with fear because they were sound asleep and they've just been hauled out of their beds. Their Dad waits to see if the alarms are blaring for carbon monoxide or fire, and on determining that it's probably yet another false fire alarm, starts checking the house - while the kids scream that they want to go back inside, it's freezing cold.This is only the most recent false alarm. And the problem with false alarms is that it teaches people to IGNORE THEM - or unplug their fire alarms. And that's how people die in fires.These smoke alarms are no longer just mediocre - they are actively bad, because they are teaching my children to ignore smoke alarms, that they are a nuisance and a problem, not a life-saving device.1Putting us in danger--don't buy!!Because our 10-year-old alarm had expired, we ordered the same model, initiated it with batteries, NON-STOP "EVACUATE! EVACUATE! CARBON MONOXIDE DETECTED, EVACUATE!" Wouldn't shut up, even after we tried putting it into the hard-wired base. Even when we took it outside to see if it "thinks" outside is full of CO2. I may take it to my local fire department to see if they have any advice, but otherwise back it goes. And we won't have a hard-wired alarm in the basement any more.1Buying Another Brand TODAYWe lost our home in a fire a little over a year ago. Now knowing the importance of good smoke detectors, We did lots of research when choosing ones for our new house. This morning at 6:15, every alarm in the house went off saying, "smoke detected. evacuate" We got all 4 kids, 4 dogs, and cat out of the house just like the last time. We saw no smoke, but we didn't the last time either. After thoroughly searching the house, having the non emergency fire out here at the crack of dawn, we still don't know what set them off. Changing the batteries in the two with red lights finally made it stop.We called First Alert, and they blew us off. THey said they should have just chirped if the battery was the problem. They said it was probably a spider (which I have had happen before) but a spider in two simultaneously seems far fetched. Our blood pressure can't take false alarms. And with no answers or suggestions from First Alert, we will be switching today.1FAULTY UNITS ARE COMMON - 'CHIRP!' sends chills down my spine Had nothing but problems with these units beginning with the very awkward replacement of batteries. One by one they became dcfective and would not reset interconnected after a battery change, causing all alarms to sound as if there was a fire until I could find and disconnect the faulty unit. Went to 5 year and then 10 year batteries (what a joke these were - also date problem) to find out all the chirping was really about failing units that needed to be replaced. The 5 year warranty is not based on when the unit is installed but the date on the unit itself, which was 5 years prior to installation in my case.Cheap plastic units and there does not seem to be a replacement that is much better. Currently replaced all of them with Kiddie 10 year lithium battery units for which you replace the entire unit when the battery dies... (made sure they were dated NOV 2017) and will see if this is an improvement.I don't believe all these high ratings on First Alert 1
First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired  Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr

First Alert Brk Sc7010 Bv Hardwired Smoke And Carbon Monoxide (Co) Detector With Talking Photoelectr

4.4
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€91,00
Sale price
€91,00
Regular price
€150,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€59,00)