Q. I dnt no how to stop it
Answer
Battery or batteries must have been getting old even with it not switched on. I betcha it would stop beeping if you replaced the battery or batteries. If you care about your sleep, replace the batteries. Otherwise, it's going to wake you up.
I have both smoke detector & carbon monoxide detector that came with the rental house. Had to replace batteries in one in the middle of the night. The other started beeping off & on a few months later. Tester showed batteries were okay, but still it kept beeping off & on. Slept with windows open & was quite fearful due to warnings all over detector that I should leave house & so on. Finally, figured out how to open it & went ahead & replaced batteries. It's fine now with no more beeping. That gives me the general rule of thumb. If it beeps & there's no fire, replace batteries. If it's a carbon monoxide detector, you can leave the house & call the fire dept. to check it out like the box says, or you can gamble on it & open the windows & run the ceiling fans in the dead of winter in case it's really carbon monoxide. If no more beeps, forget it. It's fine.
Battery or batteries must have been getting old even with it not switched on. I betcha it would stop beeping if you replaced the battery or batteries. If you care about your sleep, replace the batteries. Otherwise, it's going to wake you up.
I have both smoke detector & carbon monoxide detector that came with the rental house. Had to replace batteries in one in the middle of the night. The other started beeping off & on a few months later. Tester showed batteries were okay, but still it kept beeping off & on. Slept with windows open & was quite fearful due to warnings all over detector that I should leave house & so on. Finally, figured out how to open it & went ahead & replaced batteries. It's fine now with no more beeping. That gives me the general rule of thumb. If it beeps & there's no fire, replace batteries. If it's a carbon monoxide detector, you can leave the house & call the fire dept. to check it out like the box says, or you can gamble on it & open the windows & run the ceiling fans in the dead of winter in case it's really carbon monoxide. If no more beeps, forget it. It's fine.
Help with my carbon monoxide detector? I need to switch it to a different outlet..?
Q. I have this CO detector:
https://portalgb.knowledgebase.net/al/15121/16372/article.aspx?aid=302331&tab=browse&bt=4&r=0.4902703
I live in an apartment place, so I don't want to take my chances again trying to move it unless I know it'll stop beeping once I place it into a different outlet.. I tried taking it out of the outlet it's in now to move it to my bedroom, but it started beeping really loud and I was afraid it wouldn't stop, so I plugged it back in and it stopped a few seconds after.. Does anyone have this alarm and can you tell me WHY it's beeping when I unplug it? Again, I live in an apartment so I don't want to disturb my neighbors while doing this.. Thanks.
https://portalgb.knowledgebase.net/al/15121/16372/article.aspx?aid=302331&tab=browse&bt=4&r=0.4902703
I live in an apartment place, so I don't want to take my chances again trying to move it unless I know it'll stop beeping once I place it into a different outlet.. I tried taking it out of the outlet it's in now to move it to my bedroom, but it started beeping really loud and I was afraid it wouldn't stop, so I plugged it back in and it stopped a few seconds after.. Does anyone have this alarm and can you tell me WHY it's beeping when I unplug it? Again, I live in an apartment so I don't want to disturb my neighbors while doing this.. Thanks.
Answer
Does your complex have a super ?- you don't want to mess up a CO detector and need authorization, being a safety device. Chances are it could be just fine, but there are specific zones for mounting a CO unit and you may want to ask or research some more. Or call the manufacturer. It's there to help save your life, in addition to being somewhat ugly.
your link didn't work for me
Good Luck
Does your complex have a super ?- you don't want to mess up a CO detector and need authorization, being a safety device. Chances are it could be just fine, but there are specific zones for mounting a CO unit and you may want to ask or research some more. Or call the manufacturer. It's there to help save your life, in addition to being somewhat ugly.
your link didn't work for me
Good Luck
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