This is the five-minute job that matters more than anything else on this whole site. Working detectors are the difference between a scare and a tragedy.
We'll keep this one straight and simple, because it's the most important thing here: a smoke or carbon-monoxide detector only saves your life if it's working. They're cheap, they're easy to maintain, and yet the saddest fire and CO stories almost always include a detector with a dead battery or one that was years past its expiration. Five minutes of attention is all it takes to never be that story.
Smoke detectors give you the early warning to get out during a fire โ minutes that genuinely save lives. Carbon-monoxide (CO) detectors guard against something you can't see, smell, or taste: CO is a colorless, odorless gas produced by anything that burns fuel โ your furnace, water heater, gas range, a car running in an attached garage, a fireplace. A cracked heat exchanger or a blocked flue can fill a home with it, and the early symptoms (headache, dizziness, sleepiness) feel like the flu, so people don't realize what's happening. A working CO alarm is the only thing that catches it. This matters most in heating season, exactly when your fuel-burning appliances run hardest.
The bottom line: you need both, in the right places, tested regularly, and replaced before they age out. None of that requires a pro for battery units โ it just requires actually doing it.
Coverage is about placement, not just having a few. The widely recommended layout:
Combination smoke/CO units are a tidy way to cover both in one device near bedrooms.
Don't assume it's a false alarm. Get everyone outside to fresh air immediately, then call 911 or your gas utility's emergency line from outside. If anyone feels dizzy, sick, or confused, that's a medical emergency. Don't go back in until it's been checked. A CO alarm sounding is exactly the warning it's there to give.
Testing and battery-powered units are all DIY. Call a licensed electrician โ or us to coordinate it โ when:
Everything up to the wiring is yours, and we hope you never need us for the rest. But if a CO alarm has gone off, don't stop at resetting it โ the alarm did its job; now find out why. We can help coordinate getting your fuel-burning appliances checked.
That's worth getting right โ it's a safety item, not a someday item. Tell us your setup and we'll point you the right way.
Detectors are one of those things everybody means to keep up with. On a Home Plan, testing alarms and flagging aged-out units is part of our regular visit โ along with the rest of your seasonal maintenance โ so your home's safety basics are actually being watched, not just assumed. Documented every visit, with member savings on any work.
From a safety upgrade to a Home Plan that keeps the whole place handled โ we're right here in Columbus.
The Blue Collar Crew, LLC provides home-improvement and repair services in Southern Indiana. The guidance on this page is general homeowner safety information โ it is not professional advice and is not a substitute for a licensed trade. Follow the manufacturer's instructions for placement, testing, and expiration of your specific alarms, and follow local code requirements. Replacing or interconnecting hardwired alarms is electrical work for a licensed electrician. If a carbon-monoxide alarm sounds, leave immediately and call 911 or your gas utility's emergency line. Indiana does not issue a statewide general contractor license; licensed-trade work is performed by Indiana state-licensed plumbers (IC 25-28.5) and locally licensed electricians. A quote request is not a contract; no work is authorized until a separate written agreement complying with IC 24-5-11 is signed. Insured.