Kidde 21007624 Ac Photoelectric Smoke And Carbon Monoxide Detector Alarm | Desertcart Seychelles
Kidde 21007624 AC Photoelectric Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Detector Alarm | Hardwired with Battery Backup | Model # KN-COPE-IC
4.5/5
Product ID: 2052712
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Details
BrandKidde
Power Source
ColorWhite
Product Dimensions1.85"D x x
Item Weight14.72 ounces
AlarmVisual
⚡Hardwired with 9V battery backup for uninterrupted protection
🔥Photoelectric sensor detects smoldering fires early
🗣️Clear voice alerts for fire, CO, and low battery warnings
Frequently Bought Together
Description
🚨 Stay ahead of danger with Kidde’s all-in-one smart alarm!
SMART VOICE ALERTS - Distinct verbal warnings eliminate guesswork and keep your family informed instantly
DUAL THREAT DEFENSE - Combines advanced smoke and carbon monoxide detection in one sleek unit
UNINTERRUPTED SAFETY - Hardwired power with battery backup ensures 24/7 protection—even during outages
ALARM MEMORY INDICATOR - Green LED signals past alarms, so you never miss a critical event
TAMPER RESISTANT DESIGN - Secure installation prevents accidental disarming, keeping your home safe and sound
The Kidde 21007624 is a hardwired smoke and carbon monoxide detector featuring a photoelectric sensor for early fire detection and an electrochemical CO sensor. It includes a 9V battery backup to maintain protection during power outages, clear voice alerts for fire, CO, and low battery warnings, and a tamper-resistant design. With alarm memory and LED indicators, it offers reliable, continuous safety for your home or office.
Specifications
Brand
Kidde
Power Source
battery-powered
Color
White
Product Dimensions
1.85"D x 5.79"W x 5.79"H
Item Weight
14.72 ounces
Alarm
Visual
Operating Humidity
95 percent
Compatible Devices
Up to 24 Kidde devices (of which 18 can be initiating)
We have these in a 165 room hotel. They are not lasting. I have had to replace 6 and need another 6 today. What recourse do we have?
Can i replace a kidde p12040 (hardwired smoke detector) with this model (hardwired combo)? same company and same 3 pins on the back.
I want to replace all my Kidde 1276 detectors. I want one of the new ones to also be CO2 detector. Is this unit compatible with the 1276?
Will this co alarm expire in 5-7 years like most other co alarms?
Reviews
4.5
All from verified purchases
J**A
Same As Older One
This was a direct replacement for an older one. The connector was a little different but an adapter was provided. Batteries are included. The base was exactly the same so I didn't need to change it. It took about 2 minutes to figure out and change. The old one lasted about 12 years and never had the backup battery changed.
K**G
Perfect direct replacement for one that failed
Used same mount and wiring as one that was installed and hardwired as a set back in 2015 and I didn't want to have to fight with compatibility or replacing all of them to match.Worked perfectly the first time.
B**Y
Easy to install
The product is accurately described, exactly what I needed and easy to install.
L**S
Photoelectric/CO combination for the best price
Simple to install. Good price. I went between this and the photoelectric/CO detector combo by First Alert (https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B002UQW8OS/ref=ox_sc_sfl_title_4?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER) but the price is about $10 cheaper for Kidde. I installed two of these in a condo for my father-in-law. Installation was easy. There were 15 year old Firex (FADC #5000) in there previously but the rewiring is simple. I didn't bother paying $4.50 per adapter to avoid having to rewire it since it is so easy to do.The rewire takes 2 minutes just make sure you turn off the circuit that has the alarms on it. I didn't bother doing that a few years back when changing out 10 alarms in our home but got a few small zaps. Take out the two screws that held in the mount to the ceiling, remove the twist caps on the red (was a yellow wire on the Firex and this is used for interconnectivity between wired alarms), neutral, and hot, and replace the wires with the new Kidde. After wiring is complete put the new mount on and plug in the wired adapter to the alarm. The hardest part of the hole thing is getting the alarm to properly screw onto the mount but that's a problem with all of them.It's loud, it interconnects. It speaks to you telling you if it is a CO issue or smoke. I hope I never have to hear it other than testing regularly.
L**N
Came without a wiring harness
Luckily it was a replacement device, and the correct wiring harness was already installed in the wall mount.
B**N
Perfect match
I needed to replace a fire/carbon monoxide alarm. To be sure I had the correct one, I just put in the serial number and it was a perfect match. It’s hard to do that in a store. Amazon made it easy.
D**R
Works GREAT!
The first one malfunctioned and they rushed out a replacement.
D**N
Do not buy Kidde! False alarms and rude support
In March 2014 I replaced my 10-year old Kidde units (PI 2000 and KN-COSM-IB) with the newer versions (PI 2010 & KN-COPE-I AC respectively) - as suggested by Kidde support when questioned about appropriate replacements.I had no issues at all with the old ones in ten years, but about 4 months after installation at least one of the new KN-COPE-I AC models has become a nightmare - with 3-8 false alarms per day starting suddenly about a week ago - in late June 2014. No smoking, no cooking, no other potential red herrings- just completely unjustified false alarms at all hours of the day and night. I get up, go downstairs punch the alarm mute after verifying conditions, go to the basement and check there - nothing, then go back up two flights of stairs to bed. It has even occurred with the windows open and a stiff cross breeze in the room with the alarm.I called support, which was reminiscent of Microsoft support for Windows 95. "Brando" said it was most likely caused by one of two things - a power surge or bugs/dirt in the alarm. He admitted that this model was extremely sensitive to power surges. (Giant red flag!)He refused to do anything else until I ran down a can of air and blew out the alarm. I could see it was clean, it was only four months old and was in a clean, non-smoking environment. Brandon would have none of it. He was definitely going to be the man in charge and said false alarms could be caused by dirt left inside the unit at the (Chinese) factory, so I blew it out.Then he said to remount it, but leave the power disconnected for a few days. If the false alarms still occur, the unit is defective, you can call back and (supposedly) they will replace it - and you can repeat this process every few months until the warrantee (7 year limited) expires. However, if the false alarms stop when AC is disconnected, then you simply have power surges and it is not their problem.Reality - it IS their problem, whether the unit "went defective" or is defective by design and not able to withstand real world AC power. None of the 35+ false alarms in the last week have been accompanied by any other manifestations of power issues - clocks resetting, TV or computer glitches, etc. I am retired and am home most of the time - I would notice any significant power glitches and have noticed very short light dimming and such symptoms in the past from power fluctuations - but none associated with any of these false alarms. Our power is no more nor less stable than it has been at any other time over the last ten years when the old alarms worked without problem.So, you can either:1) Buy Kidde, experience repeated false alarms and either:a. Jump through support hoops to get them replaced every few monthsorb. Discover you have a "power issue" and need to replace them with another brand at your own expenseor2) Buy another brand to begin with and avoid the entire circusPS: After being repeatedly talked down to and rather bullied by "Brandon", I mentioned that I had spent four years teaching university physics and had some familiarity with electricity - probably more than he. His replay was "Oh yeah? Well, you don't know me or what I know." If you like dealing with this kind of attitude, you'll love dealing with Kidde support.
Common Questions
Trustpilot
TrustScore 4.5 | 7,300+ reviews
Suresh K.
Very impressed with the quality and fast delivery. Will shop here again.
4 days ago
Fatima A.
Best international shipping I've ever tried. Worth every penny!
Front-loading smoke and carbon monoxide alarm offers protection from both fire and CO in one unit. AC-wired with battery backup alarm emits beepoing tone followed by a voice warning. The uniquely designed front-loading battery compartment makes battery replacement quick and easy and ensures proper installation. Made with photoelectric sensors for detecting smoke and fire, this alarm also includes the world's most accurate CO sensing technology.
","image":["https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/617Kci++pOL.jpg","https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81lzRJ2RXSL.jpg"],"offers":{"@type":"Offer","priceCurrency":"SCR","price":"5386.58","itemCondition":"https://schema.org/NewCondition","availability":"https://schema.org/InStock","shippingDetails":{"deliveryTime":{"@type":"ShippingDeliveryTime","minValue":4,"maxValue":4,"unitCode":"d"}}},"category":"toolsandhomeimprovement","review":[{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"J***A"},"datePublished":"July 7, 2024","name":"Same As Older One","reviewBody":"This was a direct replacement for an older one. The connector was a little different but an adapter was provided. Batteries are included. The base was exactly the same so I didn't need to change it. It took about 2 minutes to figure out and change. The old one lasted about 12 years and never had the backup battery changed."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"K***G"},"datePublished":"November 6, 2024","name":"Perfect direct replacement for one that failed","reviewBody":"Used same mount and wiring as one that was installed and hardwired as a set back in 2015 and I didn't want to have to fight with compatibility or replacing all of them to match.Worked perfectly the first time."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"B***Y"},"datePublished":"December 27, 2024","name":"Easy to install","reviewBody":"The product is accurately described, exactly what I needed and easy to install."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"L***S"},"datePublished":"July 24, 2017","name":"Photoelectric/CO combination for the best price","reviewBody":"Simple to install. Good price. I went between this and the photoelectric/CO detector combo by First Alert (https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B002UQW8OS/ref=ox_sc_sfl_title_4?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER) but the price is about $10 cheaper for Kidde. I installed two of these in a condo for my father-in-law. Installation was easy. There were 15 year old Firex (FADC #5000) in there previously but the rewiring is simple. I didn't bother paying $4.50 per adapter to avoid having to rewire it since it is so easy to do.The rewire takes 2 minutes just make sure you turn off the circuit that has the alarms on it. I didn't bother doing that a few years back when changing out 10 alarms in our home but got a few small zaps. Take out the two screws that held in the mount to the ceiling, remove the twist caps on the red (was a yellow wire on the Firex and this is used for interconnectivity between wired alarms), neutral, and hot, and replace the wires with the new Kidde. After wiring is complete put the new mount on and plug in the wired adapter to the alarm. The hardest part of the hole thing is getting the alarm to properly screw onto the mount but that's a problem with all of them.It's loud, it interconnects. It speaks to you telling you if it is a CO issue or smoke. I hope I never have to hear it other than testing regularly."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"4.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"L***N"},"datePublished":"November 15, 2024","name":"Came without a wiring harness","reviewBody":"Luckily it was a replacement device, and the correct wiring harness was already installed in the wall mount."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"B***N"},"datePublished":"December 26, 2024","name":"Perfect match","reviewBody":"I needed to replace a fire/carbon monoxide alarm. To be sure I had the correct one, I just put in the serial number and it was a perfect match. It’s hard to do that in a store. Amazon made it easy."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"D***R"},"datePublished":"October 26, 2024","name":"Works GREAT!","reviewBody":"The first one malfunctioned and they rushed out a replacement."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"1.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"D***N"},"datePublished":"March 7, 2014","name":"Do not buy Kidde! False alarms and rude support","reviewBody":"In March 2014 I replaced my 10-year old Kidde units (PI 2000 and KN-COSM-IB) with the newer versions (PI 2010 & KN-COPE-I AC respectively) - as suggested by Kidde support when questioned about appropriate replacements.I had no issues at all with the old ones in ten years, but about 4 months after installation at least one of the new KN-COPE-I AC models has become a nightmare - with 3-8 false alarms per day starting suddenly about a week ago - in late June 2014. No smoking, no cooking, no other potential red herrings- just completely unjustified false alarms at all hours of the day and night. I get up, go downstairs punch the alarm mute after verifying conditions, go to the basement and check there - nothing, then go back up two flights of stairs to bed. It has even occurred with the windows open and a stiff cross breeze in the room with the alarm.I called support, which was reminiscent of Microsoft support for Windows 95. \"Brando\" said it was most likely caused by one of two things - a power surge or bugs/dirt in the alarm. He admitted that this model was extremely sensitive to power surges. (Giant red flag!)He refused to do anything else until I ran down a can of air and blew out the alarm. I could see it was clean, it was only four months old and was in a clean, non-smoking environment. Brandon would have none of it. He was definitely going to be the man in charge and said false alarms could be caused by dirt left inside the unit at the (Chinese) factory, so I blew it out.Then he said to remount it, but leave the power disconnected for a few days. If the false alarms still occur, the unit is defective, you can call back and (supposedly) they will replace it - and you can repeat this process every few months until the warrantee (7 year limited) expires. However, if the false alarms stop when AC is disconnected, then you simply have power surges and it is not their problem.Reality - it IS their problem, whether the unit \"went defective\" or is defective by design and not able to withstand real world AC power. None of the 35+ false alarms in the last week have been accompanied by any other manifestations of power issues - clocks resetting, TV or computer glitches, etc. I am retired and am home most of the time - I would notice any significant power glitches and have noticed very short light dimming and such symptoms in the past from power fluctuations - but none associated with any of these false alarms. Our power is no more nor less stable than it has been at any other time over the last ten years when the old alarms worked without problem.So, you can either:1) Buy Kidde, experience repeated false alarms and either:a. Jump through support hoops to get them replaced every few monthsorb. Discover you have a \"power issue\" and need to replace them with another brand at your own expenseor2) Buy another brand to begin with and avoid the entire circusPS: After being repeatedly talked down to and rather bullied by \"Brandon\", I mentioned that I had spent four years teaching university physics and had some familiarity with electricity - probably more than he. His replay was \"Oh yeah? Well, you don't know me or what I know.\" If you like dealing with this kind of attitude, you'll love dealing with Kidde support."}],"aggregateRating":{"@type":"AggregateRating","ratingValue":4.375,"bestRating":5,"ratingCount":8}},{"@type":"FAQPage","mainEntity":[{"@type":"Question","name":"We have these in a 165 room hotel. They are not lasting. I have had to replace 6 and need another 6 today. What recourse do we have?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Welcome to the club, I have been having the same problem only on a much smaller scale. Try contacting Kidde and see what they say, however if you read the installation instructions that come with each unit it states they only last 7 - 10 years before having to be replaced. I believe that is from the date of manufacture (the units are marked) and not the install date. The units I replaced are right at the low end of the replacement dates. Good luck."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Can i replace a kidde p12040 (hardwired smoke detector) with this model (hardwired combo)? same company and same 3 pins on the back.","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"I'm fairly sure you can. They even offer adapters that allowed them to replace my old Firex wired-in detectors."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"I want to replace all my Kidde 1276 detectors. I want one of the new ones to also be CO2 detector. Is this unit compatible with the 1276?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Yes. You can see that in the owner's manual. http://dms.hvacpartners.com//docs/2001/Public/0B/User-Guide-KN-COPE-I-ENG-(2528.pdf"}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Will this co alarm expire in 5-7 years like most other co alarms?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"It will last 10 years according to the warranty and user manual.\nTen years after initial power-up, this unit will “chirp” twice\nevery 30 seconds to indicate that it is time to replace the\nalarm. A label has been provided on the side of the alarm\nthat has “Replace by” printed on it. Write the replace by\ndate on the label. The date written on the label should be\nten (10) years after the alarm was initially powered.\nThis alarm does have end of life Hush® which allows you to\nsilence the trouble chirp for two days giving you extra time\nto replace the unit when it is more convenient. To activate,\npress the test/reset button. While in the End of Life Hush®\nmode, will still detect CO and Smoke. This feature can only\nbe used for 30 days from the time the unit first indicates\nend of life. At the end of the 30 day period the alarm cannot\nbe hushed and must be replaced immediately."}}]}]}