No false alarms do not happen all of the time. If the sensor is going off, it is due to 1) Incorrect placement of the device. 2) Super dusty in the building. 3) Greasy cooking, which is causing the sensor to clog. 4) A bad sensor to begin with.
I used to work on alarm panels on my ship, when I was in the U.S. Navy. Most false alarms were either a bad sensor, cut wiring, or bad sensor module in the annunciator panel.
Steam getting into the sensor will not cause it to go off. If the sensor is placed in front of the bathroom, move it. If people are not turning on the exhaust fan, take long hot showers, put in a humidity sensing switch, to automatically turn on the bathroom exhaust fan. It then will only shut off when the humidity level gets below the set point.
All I am hearing is excuses at this point, not reasoning. If you want help, you need to work with people on these boards. If you just want to stomp your feet, that is fine. But I will refuse to help anyone that wants to become argumentative, because they have it set in their mind that there is not a problem, and it is all Comcast's fault at this point.
I used to work on alarm panels on my ship, when I was in the U.S. Navy. Most false alarms were either a bad sensor, cut wiring, or bad sensor module in the annunciator panel.
Steam getting into the sensor will not cause it to go off. If the sensor is placed in front of the bathroom, move it. If people are not turning on the exhaust fan, take long hot showers, put in a humidity sensing switch, to automatically turn on the bathroom exhaust fan. It then will only shut off when the humidity level gets below the set point.
All I am hearing is excuses at this point, not reasoning. If you want help, you need to work with people on these boards. If you just want to stomp your feet, that is fine. But I will refuse to help anyone that wants to become argumentative, because they have it set in their mind that there is not a problem, and it is all Comcast's fault at this point.