Mine were Kidde as well. They were installed by my dad maybe 17 years ago when he built the home. I eventually found the breaker after a fun game of yelling “Is the light on?” I laughed when I found out it was on the same breaker as the septic aerator (which I had apparently also attached to a garage circuit overhead for work lights and ceiling outlets for tools due to the wall circuit overloading). Fun fact for the people who may not be familiar with septic aerators - when they lose power they have a box on a separate circuit for the failure alarm (which isn’t very loud but annoying af), so apparently when my aerator failed and I turned off the alarm until I got a replacement 1 month later, I had also turned off the fire alarms (good thing they have batteries).
Comment on YSK Your smoke detectors should be replaced every 7-10 years
nocturne@slrpnk.net 2 days agoNew ones had the same pigtail as the old one (both were Kiddie brand), but I did have one I had to rewire. As far as I can tell, they do not have a dedicated circuit, so I had to shut down the entire house.
unphazed@lemmy.world 2 days ago
Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca 2 days ago
Depending on the building code / age of house it may or may not be on an individual circuit.
I think newer homes don’t so there’s one less point of failure that can prevent them for going off in a fire. I could be wrong though.