Bought one today from B&M Hamilton. Mark as a pound on the website too so maybe worth a check if you nearby to yours.
Eveready Smoke Alarm. For the detection of smoke as a consequence of domestic fires in your home. General use optical smoke alarm for bedrooms and living areas. Pack of 2 smoke detectors.
Features: Quick reacting to all fire types Loud 85dB alarm with built in test button Flash alarm indicator Includes 9V battery
Top comments
fireman1
28 Jul 1622#10
Yeah your dead right. Who really needs the fire service now. I obviously exclude those who do actually need rescuing from fires, and those who don't but wouldn't mind the fire being put out anyway. People in motor accidents, those trapped in floods, stuck in lifts, mangled in machinery, stuck under buildings, fallen in water, hit by trains, effected by chemicals, involved in terrorist attacks and a hundred things in between. But yeah your right, who needs a fire service seeing there are far fewer fires today than previously. We will even correct spelling for you. (even if the grammar it's still terrible)
Ps fitting smoke alarms to make the elderly, ill and vulnerable safer is a terrible waste of money purely designed to justify employment. You must be some kind of genius.
canaryruss to wesgerrard
27 Jul 1614#7
whilst I endorse the fire safety check, please only take the smoke alarms if you really can't afford it as the fire service must have to soak up the cost
Going_Digital
28 Jul 163#36
Be aware that the EVEREADY brand is not the battery company from years ago. The brand is being used on horrible cheap rubbish from China to fool people into thinking it is an established quality brand. I bought some eveready brand lightbulbs and they were the worst I have ever had, they literally fell apart in the socket and those that did work lasted a couple of months at best. Don't waste your money on this cheep rubbish.
Consider that a smoke alarm is a safety device that one day might save your life, get a decent one. You can even get the local fire brigade to come and install some decent ones for free.
summerof76
27 Jul 163#8
Pardon the pun, heat added :laughing:
Latest comments (84)
Question1Everything
19 Jul 17#84
You'll find very little of these for sale. It appears the shop is clearing out old stock and replacing with new codes (which our local ones had in the storerooms ready to put on the shelves) . It appears that the apparently identical replacements coming into the shop are no longer £5.99, they are now £12.99. If they are the same alarms why is there a massive price hike? Could it be cashing in on people fears about home safety or are they more advanced models?
artnada
24 Jun 17#83
These are reduced from £9.99 to £5.00 in Cheltenham store. Loads at that price and still a good buy.
furion1985
3 Aug 16#82
Yes, please see all of the comments.
ashman33
3 Aug 16#81
Ours is on a monthly plan and if it goes off the fire brigade get some code on their screens and decide what to do. Yes they did came out when we burnt the gammon on the griddle! How embarrassing!
Monzer
3 Aug 16#80
It flashes an led to let u know.
Monzer
3 Aug 16#79
Hoover the openings on the front. I guarantee you it is dust. This particular model serms to be susceptible to false alarm due to dust. A quick hoover and you'll be fine for weeks. Its a good sign.. dust looks rather like smoke to the sensor.
Monzer
3 Aug 16#78
To sell in the UK fire alarms need to meet strict standards. The everready alarm is sold under several brand names. I have one of these with a different brand name that cost me 4.99. You can get a UK assembled Ai smoke alarm for maybe a pound more. I have a mixture of brands. These ever ready branded ones are as good as any.
A little tip. If the alarm sometimes gives false alarms, give it a blast of air or give it a hoover over the openings. Dust can false trigger the sensor.
pantaiema
2 Aug 16#77
Do not waste your time. As usual this is store specific.
I was in my local B&M, it is available at regular price ....
dexix
30 Jul 16#76
Nope
soldierboy001
30 Jul 16#75
Ah poor thing. :smile:
DEBULL77
30 Jul 16#74
Unfortunately one of these went off for no reason at 6am , the only way to turn it off was to remove the batteries.so not such a good buy as I was hoping for a lie in ..
furion1985
29 Jul 16#73
You are welcome.
neovo2k
29 Jul 16#72
Picked up last 2 in my local store for £1, batterys included also. Win win. Thanks OP
2pacslilhomie
29 Jul 16#71
Hate to be **** (not really) but you haven't actually beat the offer?? That and the fact there is no stock in any stores near me, therefore I refer to my earlier comment about 'eveready' and not 'Duracell' batteries.:sunglasses:
DEBULL77
29 Jul 16#70
Thank you OP got the last one in my local B&M it was marked up as previously £8.99 reduced to £1. for that price I could not have bought the batteries.
dumbmayhem
29 Jul 16#69
Doors should be closed at night in order for the smoke to not further travel throughout the house and thus prevent you from escaping. A closed door will still let some smoke through the edges which will set off the smoke detector and give you a much better chance of escaping rather than being trapped.
You'll probobly find that it was a heat alarm which was installed in the kitchen which will only activate when the heat rises to a considerable temperature. As you've pointed out, a smoke alarm in a kitchen is going to be going off a lot.
mushypeas25
29 Jul 16#68
Does this beep every 30 seconds to let you know it's on?
soldierboy001
29 Jul 16#67
There are hundreds just like you on HUKD's.
soldierboy001
29 Jul 16#66
3 o'clock in the morning or 3 o'clock in the afternoon?
src
28 Jul 16#65
Thanks OP, Needed them for my new house, great price.
lockwoodisbored
28 Jul 16#64
What rot! Please jeopardise the safety of your family because I'm concerned about the Fire Brigades budget. I think they'll get by.
charliemike
28 Jul 16#63
If anyone can post a deal for a Nest Protect alarm for a pound, I would be grateful. Thank-you.
Good deal but personally I`d be buying a better brand of smoke alarm that might just save my life along with a good carbon moxide detector.
2pacslilhomie
28 Jul 16#60
Already have smoke alarms but buying them anyway. 2 eveready 9v batteries for £1, can't beat it!
amygreen79677
28 Jul 162#59
Thanks I got a couple in my local :smile:
I also saw a sign next to an empty shelf saying "12 Foot Tramp + Enclosure" :neutral_face: .. not sure who would want to buy a tramp when there are plenty on the streets but then again if I saw a 12 foot tramp I would be pretty scared and want it put in an enclosure...so...yeah.
Treboeth
28 Jul 161#58
:stuck_out_tongue:
Bridotronic
28 Jul 16#57
Smoking hot lol
Apogee00
28 Jul 162#56
Treboeth
28 Jul 16#55
The alarm went off :confused:
Apogee00
28 Jul 16#54
How has this only got 1000° ?!?!
flamethrower
28 Jul 16#53
good
cabek666
28 Jul 16#52
Nice. Cheep americium.
WBRacing
28 Jul 161#51
Agreed. And anyone who has ever read a lease car deal on here will know just how damning a statement that is.
Clearly they are a professional oxygen waster.
anlygi
28 Jul 16#50
You could barely buy a cheap 9v battery for this price let alone two of them with smoke alarms attached!
frostbear
28 Jul 16#49
Thanks OP, got a couple, much appreciated
topss
28 Jul 16#48
Common sense would suggest you place an appropriate smoke/fire/heat/CO2 alarm at the appropriate places. These are not really appropriate for the kitchen area because you'll probably suffer many false alarms whilst cooking. A 'heat' alarm would be more suitable for the kitchen and a smoke alarm just outside.
othen
28 Jul 161#47
You are being a bit harsh on JHW there Fireman1, his point was about the provision of free (to the user, not to the taxpayer) smoke alarms scheme being poor value, and not the fire services being superfluous.
I have a good friend who is a serving fireman, who confirms there is a lot of spare time during shifts (which is inevitable for an emergency service because emergencies are a bit unpredictable), so the net cost to the fire services of the scheme is just transport and the alarms themselves. At the same time it is perhaps useful (my fire-fighter mate confirms) to get a look inside properties (and sometimes be horrified by the way parlous state in which some people live), which I suppose might be a good investment in the longer term.
As a taxpayer I'm a little surprised that the state gives away smoke detectors which are readily available (and not just to the elderly, ill and vulnerable as you suggest).
So, what is my point: the fire services (all 40 odd of them) should give free advice on fire prevention, escape and safety; this deal proves it is cheap enough for home owners and landlords to buy their own smoke alarms.
Best wishes,
A
buglawton
28 Jul 16#46
CO - Carbon Monoxide
Yes you should have these in any room with an open gas fire and maybe another near the gas boiler.
118luke
28 Jul 16#45
That could be a double edged sword. for instance, if the smoke alarm was outside the kitchen and a small fire broke out in the kitchen - the fire would probably build up to be much larger and more fierce before the smoke detector goes off.
If the door had been left open, the alarm would be a lot more likely to detect the fire in its early stages - warning you a lot sooner.
loveszebargains
28 Jul 16#44
Mine goes off every time I try an cook :smile:
loveszebargains
28 Jul 16#43
Well said!!
petesteele128
28 Jul 16#42
Ask the fire service you'll get them free and fitted
sgtbarton
28 Jul 16#41
Mains wired x 2 Nest's with battery back up (they self test) and all tablets phones in around and out of the house will all scream at us if so much as a sniff of smoke or carbon monoxide ( + one of these in theloft conversion)
This is not me bragging, yes they cost a lot of money but for the next 10 years whilst my 4 kids grow up they could have wacked an extra zero on the end of what they cost to be honest. (Specially need them with my missus - I know what nights are worth going home for tea :-)
squiff
28 Jul 16#40
It's VITAL you replace the batteries or get new smoke alarms. They could save your and your family's lives.
summerof76
27 Jul 163#8
Pardon the pun, heat added :laughing:
1qw to summerof76
28 Jul 16#39
Dont need to test mine, it will always let me know, ususally at 3'oclock at night!
Mr Hunter
28 Jul 16#38
A 4 year old died up the road from me yesterday and really shock us up. As we also have a 4 year old. Early reports suggest they had fire/smoke alarms, and this saved the other children and the mum. But i would advise all of you to phone the local fire station and as a family, sit down and go in detail what will happen when there is a fire in the house.
And please do take the one's from the fire station as they are sealed shut to stop people removing the batteries. They are more than happy to replace damaged, broken ones. They last 10 years too.
I think they would much rather going round and giving these out and advice on escapes routes everyday rather than bringing out a 4 yr old from a burning house.
soldierboy001
28 Jul 16#37
I hope that was a tongue in cheek comment as I don't understand them mojo things, if not where should I keep my dog at night? out in the garden. First line of defense against burglars, and he's not locked in but his bed is there which he likes to occupy a lot.
Going_Digital
28 Jul 163#36
Be aware that the EVEREADY brand is not the battery company from years ago. The brand is being used on horrible cheap rubbish from China to fool people into thinking it is an established quality brand. I bought some eveready brand lightbulbs and they were the worst I have ever had, they literally fell apart in the socket and those that did work lasted a couple of months at best. Don't waste your money on this cheep rubbish.
Consider that a smoke alarm is a safety device that one day might save your life, get a decent one. You can even get the local fire brigade to come and install some decent ones for free.
jakeyboy4398
28 Jul 16#35
And shame on you prashdash_2k. My friend had a fire at her home and suggested I contact them to get a quick check.They provided excellent advice. Keep your opinions to yourself and think what u like but I have a disability and found them very helpful. I have also had crime prevention officers out as well. I don't consider I wasted anyone's time at all. Some people on here don't know all the facts so stop judging people u do not even know. I actually already had a smoke alarm which I paid for myself but they still put 2 more in.
DeeF1
28 Jul 161#34
So, as the Fireman (that does pith all, all day) has got your ass thrown over his shoulder, coming down a ladder to bring you to safety and then go and retrieve the rest of your family from your burning home, be sure to tell him/her to put you down at once as he's only trying to justify his existence....
CrazyBob
28 Jul 16#33
Also bought some last month to replace an existing one but not used yet
JaMoUsE
28 Jul 161#32
i bought these last month, one of them randomly went off a few times, first time during the night - Nearly had a heart attack! I bought a different one from b and q and have had no issues with it. Its possible i got a dodgy one but I wouldnt buy it again.
Master G
28 Jul 161#31
I had the free fire safety check a couple of years ago. As well as fitting the two smoke alarms (in the correct place), they confirmed that my plug sockets were not overloaded and checked my night time routine. The best bit of advice was regarding my door key which i routinely left on the table in the living room. It had never occurred to me that i wouldn't be able to open the door in the event of a fire/smoke in that room. And, prash_2k, don't worry, your tax is being spent on training. Training the public how to prevent/escape from fires.
ghostm4n
28 Jul 16#30
Agreed. Some people just beggar belief at times.
ghostm4n
28 Jul 162#29
Probably one of the stupidest comments I have read on here.
squiff
28 Jul 16#28
No point having a smoke alarm if you don't test it once a month. I am guilty of forgetting this.
Whether you've got one already of have just bought these...
prash_2k
28 Jul 16#27
Think our money (tax payers) can be spent on better stuff other than coming to your house cos you can't be bothered to buy a couple of smoke detectors. Like training so our loved ones can survive a blaze.
Shame on you Jakey my boy. :man:
dazzler303
28 Jul 162#22
I like this website, but it does appear to attract some real prats.
Would you really call out the fire service just to save you a few quid on fire alarms? Its like the people who go to their doctors to get free prescriptions for Nurofen and Paracetamol readily available for 20-50p a packet - then moan when they have to wait for appointments when they have a real issue.
Its shocking, people dont appear to value their and others wasted time as oppose to spending a £1.
markypoos77 to dazzler303
28 Jul 16#26
i took my son to an event at local library where the local fire service attended and announced that they provide this service free of charge. be rude not too. when they came out (to a house we'd recently bought) they confirmed the original alarms were situated in the wrong place which to me was quite obvious but still nice to have it confirmed
markypoos77
28 Jul 16#25
shouldnt be allowed to own a pet if you leave it in the kitchen overnight :wink:
markypoos77
28 Jul 16#24
i think if you're getting that from what i've written, you're a pretty special person.
pantaiema
28 Jul 16#23
Has anyone found it on another B&M ??
topss
28 Jul 16#21
Thanks, picked up a couple of packs. Marked up at £8.99, scan at £1
mrew42
28 Jul 161#20
You sir, are an almighty **** for making that statement
markypoos77
28 Jul 16#17
not sure why people buy fire alarms - i contacted my local fire department and they came out and fitted two smoke alarms and a special one for the kitchen - talked through some really good advice that we weren't currently doing - eg closing kitchen door every night before bed as will give you an extra 30 minutes to get out of the house if a fire starts in kitchen - where its most likely too.
fantastic.
topss to markypoos77
28 Jul 161#18
You're not sure why people buy fire alarms?
DexMorgan to markypoos77
28 Jul 162#19
WHAT?
My dog sleeps in the kitchen!!
I'd better show him where the fire extinguisher is.
bobdylan
28 Jul 161#16
Idiot
sgtbarton
28 Jul 16#15
WOW I think is all that can be said! just WOW
aimeefem
28 Jul 16#14
In for one to see how good it is.
zx636r
28 Jul 161#13
If you were aiming to win the "Most liked post of 2016" award, I'd try again.
ILikeUsingGifsToComment
28 Jul 161#12
bseal1947
28 Jul 162#11
I'm sending my thanks. Luckily not needed your services but you change lives every day. Under appreciated and ready to put your lives on the line at a moments notice.
Thank you
fireman1
28 Jul 1622#10
Yeah your dead right. Who really needs the fire service now. I obviously exclude those who do actually need rescuing from fires, and those who don't but wouldn't mind the fire being put out anyway. People in motor accidents, those trapped in floods, stuck in lifts, mangled in machinery, stuck under buildings, fallen in water, hit by trains, effected by chemicals, involved in terrorist attacks and a hundred things in between. But yeah your right, who needs a fire service seeing there are far fewer fires today than previously. We will even correct spelling for you. (even if the grammar it's still terrible)
Ps fitting smoke alarms to make the elderly, ill and vulnerable safer is a terrible waste of money purely designed to justify employment. You must be some kind of genius.
jhw
27 Jul 161#9
The cost of two smoke alarms in negligible, probably about £10, compared to the total cost of the 'free' fire safety check. The whole scheme is a waste of money - designed to keep staff busy and justify their employment, seeing there are far fewer fires today that previously.
wesgerrard
27 Jul 161#6
Even cheaper option is to contact your local fire station and ask for a free home fire safety check. If you don't have any they will supply you for free
canaryruss to wesgerrard
27 Jul 1614#7
whilst I endorse the fire safety check, please only take the smoke alarms if you really can't afford it as the fire service must have to soak up the cost
veedubjai
27 Jul 161#4
Always wonder why co2 alarms cost so much compare to smoke alarms. No excuse to not have these in every room.
jakeyboy4398 to veedubjai
27 Jul 161#5
My local fire station did a free fire safety check and supplied and fit 2 free fire angel smoke alarms a few weeks ago. Very quick to call and free alarms were great.
furion1985
27 Jul 161#2
Treboeth to furion1985
27 Jul 16#3
Any proof :laughing:
Cracking find for a pound :smiley:
paullad4
27 Jul 162#1
no excuse not to. buy some for those who might not :-)
Opening post
Eveready Smoke Alarm.
For the detection of smoke as a consequence of domestic fires in your home.
General use optical smoke alarm for bedrooms and living areas.
Pack of 2 smoke detectors.
Features:
Quick reacting to all fire types
Loud 85dB alarm with built in test button
Flash alarm indicator
Includes 9V battery
Top comments
Ps fitting smoke alarms to make the elderly, ill and vulnerable safer is a terrible waste of money purely designed to justify employment. You must be some kind of genius.
Consider that a smoke alarm is a safety device that one day might save your life, get a decent one. You can even get the local fire brigade to come and install some decent ones for free.
Latest comments (84)
A little tip. If the alarm sometimes gives false alarms, give it a blast of air or give it a hoover over the openings. Dust can false trigger the sensor.
I was in my local B&M, it is available at regular price ....
You'll probobly find that it was a heat alarm which was installed in the kitchen which will only activate when the heat rises to a considerable temperature. As you've pointed out, a smoke alarm in a kitchen is going to be going off a lot.
There are hundreds just like you on HUKD's.
http://www.diy.com/departments/duracell-plus-power-9v-alkaline-batteries-pack-of-2/805096_BQ.prd
There you go, minus actual smoke alarm.:smiley:
I also saw a sign next to an empty shelf saying "12 Foot Tramp + Enclosure" :neutral_face: .. not sure who would want to buy a tramp when there are plenty on the streets but then again if I saw a 12 foot tramp I would be pretty scared and want it put in an enclosure...so...yeah.
Clearly they are a professional oxygen waster.
I have a good friend who is a serving fireman, who confirms there is a lot of spare time during shifts (which is inevitable for an emergency service because emergencies are a bit unpredictable), so the net cost to the fire services of the scheme is just transport and the alarms themselves. At the same time it is perhaps useful (my fire-fighter mate confirms) to get a look inside properties (and sometimes be horrified by the way parlous state in which some people live), which I suppose might be a good investment in the longer term.
As a taxpayer I'm a little surprised that the state gives away smoke detectors which are readily available (and not just to the elderly, ill and vulnerable as you suggest).
So, what is my point: the fire services (all 40 odd of them) should give free advice on fire prevention, escape and safety; this deal proves it is cheap enough for home owners and landlords to buy their own smoke alarms.
Best wishes,
A
Yes you should have these in any room with an open gas fire and maybe another near the gas boiler.
If the door had been left open, the alarm would be a lot more likely to detect the fire in its early stages - warning you a lot sooner.
This is not me bragging, yes they cost a lot of money but for the next 10 years whilst my 4 kids grow up they could have wacked an extra zero on the end of what they cost to be honest. (Specially need them with my missus - I know what nights are worth going home for tea :-)
And please do take the one's from the fire station as they are sealed shut to stop people removing the batteries. They are more than happy to replace damaged, broken ones. They last 10 years too.
I think they would much rather going round and giving these out and advice on escapes routes everyday rather than bringing out a 4 yr old from a burning house.
Consider that a smoke alarm is a safety device that one day might save your life, get a decent one. You can even get the local fire brigade to come and install some decent ones for free.
Whether you've got one already of have just bought these...
Shame on you Jakey my boy. :man:
Would you really call out the fire service just to save you a few quid on fire alarms? Its like the people who go to their doctors to get free prescriptions for Nurofen and Paracetamol readily available for 20-50p a packet - then moan when they have to wait for appointments when they have a real issue.
Its shocking, people dont appear to value their and others wasted time as oppose to spending a £1.
fantastic.
My dog sleeps in the kitchen!!
I'd better show him where the fire extinguisher is.
Thank you
Ps fitting smoke alarms to make the elderly, ill and vulnerable safer is a terrible waste of money purely designed to justify employment. You must be some kind of genius.
Cracking find for a pound :smiley: