Most times when I hear an alarm (presumably for fire) go off in the office or a public place, it goes as such:
- Observe for any signs of actual emergency: smoke, smell, flame, first responders, or panicking crowds
- If nothing unusual seen and nobody is getting up, assume it’s a false alarm and continue with task at hand
- (Most of the time) Alarm was false and goes away within a few minutes
- (<1% of the time) There is indeed a fire somewhere in the building and people take their time gathering belongings before leisurely walking to the nearest door
Same goes in the house:
- Wake up groggy, assume false alarm again
- Put on pants, check out the source of the noise
- (4 times in current residence) Find no indication of fire, hush alarm
- Alarm shuts up with a dose of compressed air. If not, sledgehammer time and buy a new one the next day.
That can’t be how most of us are supposed to go about it, right?
Is it for a lack of better smoke detection technology? A consequence of buying low-quality detectors? While we’re at it, can anyone recommend a smoke detector that does its job with a minimum of false alarms?
That’s a decently rational response you’ve described, though. If you were really at immediate risk, you’d probably know it, especially with an alarm going off to get you looking for signs of danger. And it’s usually better to have a lazy, skeptical evacuation than a panicked stampede. Schools do fire drills to check the alarms, sure, but it’s also important to make them a routine thing that all the kids know how to handle.