56 Messages
What do you do when the alarm goes off in the middle of the night?
Walk me through this scenario.
Here's the situation. Me, wife, 10 year old son and 8 year old daughter are home. House is in a typical suburban development. Everyone sleeps in separate bedrooms on the second floor.
And the alarm goes off at 2am.
What do you do?
Here's the situation. Me, wife, 10 year old son and 8 year old daughter are home. House is in a typical suburban development. Everyone sleeps in separate bedrooms on the second floor.
And the alarm goes off at 2am.
What do you do?
captain11
Captain
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6.2K Messages
4 years ago
First, suburban area like yourself, two story colonial. There are entry sensors on every basement window, motions in every room on first floor, on all doors and several glass breaks. (Let's skip any environmental sensor for now -water, temp, freeze, co, smoke etc.) ALL sensors are armed to instant trigger, except the normal entry door from the garage to the kitchen. In home mode entry and exit delay is set to 0/0. That is, when we go to bed on the second floor we expect no one or no thing on the first floor. ZIP.
If the alarm goes off, I have 3 Simpliscams that cover the front, back and side of the house internally, and we opt in for monitoring to access the cameras. So...
Alarm goes off, monitoring calls we say dispatch. Period. Done.
Now if a smoke, co2 etc I will investigate myself while they are on the phone prior to them dispatching fire dept.
Hope this helps. I am sure others will post.
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sevensiamesecats
2.2K Messages
4 years ago
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jonny_gogo
56 Messages
4 years ago
One thing that concerns me, is that the likelihood of a false alarm seems far higher than a real event. I regard it as inevitable that at some point in the next five years either a stray balloon, or bird strike on a window, or heat from a vent would set off a sensor.
And so, if we get the system, we need an idea of how to react to an alarm. I know how I'd react to hearing glass breaking in the middle of the night. That is an unambiguous, and extremely unlikely, situation. The alarm going off in the middle of the night, on the other hand, seems a bit more ambiguous and more likely. It's an interesting dichotomy.
A false alarm during the day while no one is home is also ambiguous but less urgent. We could just let the police respond as they will, and I assume it would be a low priority call and they'd be slow to respond, but I'd figure and real burglar would flee upon hearing the alarm. So, I'm fairly comfortable with a potential false alarm when no one is home.
I'm more concerned about a potential false alarm while we ARE home. I'll scar the kids for life if we have to hide in the house. Remembering, the likelihood of a false alarm is MUCH higher than a real burglary.
I am most concerned about a potential false alarm while I am away on business and the wife and kids are home alone. They'll all be terrified.
We have had a couple burglaries in the neighborhood over the past 5 years or so, seasonal burglaries of cars in driveways and on the streets, but always into empty homes. Except once, not exactly in our neighborhood but within a couple miles, someone was home alone and some thugs crashed through their back door, totally randomly, and basically abducted him for a short time. That was crazy and those thugs were eventually caught.
All that being said, getting an alarm system is going to drastically increase the likelihood that we'd have to react to a potential break in.
Anybody ever have a false alarm while home?
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captain11
Captain
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6.2K Messages
4 years ago
We had one false alarm with ADT while we were in Europe on vacation and our neighbors laughed when they went into our house after the police went in and found a very large spider on the kitchen motion sensor. I won't bore you with the details but we have chalked about about 4 false alarms in almost 20 years. Yes, they are unnerving but overall I would get Simplisafe all over again.
Good luck with your decision.
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sevensiamesecats
2.2K Messages
4 years ago
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jonny_gogo
56 Messages
4 years ago
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captain11
Captain
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6.2K Messages
4 years ago
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jonny_gogo
56 Messages
4 years ago
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wtpmarsh
13 Messages
4 years ago
I should point out that probably the first four false alarms caused by the motion sensors happened during the first six months of owning the system. Like Captain11, we have a two story and the motion sensors are located downstairs, where there should be no activity once we've retired for the night. Let me tell you, when you're awoken at 2:00 AM with that darn siren screaming, you're on your feet and in motion before you really have time to think, let alone analyze the system to find what triggered the alarm. This is where the monitoring came in handy as each time they were able to tell us exactly which sensor faulted the trigger. Each time, while armed, we were able to "clear" the house without having police dispatched though we never let the SS dispatcher end the call until we were satisfied it was safe to do so.
I think it was after that 4th false alarm that we got SS tech involved with diagnosing just what the heck, was causing the motion sensors to trigger the alarm. Honestly, they never really did figure it out, but had us change the internal settings in the motion detectors to a less sensitive setting. Since then, we had just one more false alarm before we repositioned that sensor to somewhere that seems to have been more agreeable for it.
The final false alarm happened in the middle of the day and was triggered by a smoke detector. We kept dispatch on the phone until we successfully verified there was no smoke or fire and then replaced the battery in that unit later that day. Yes, it would have been REAL nice to receive some advance notice that the battery was running low on juice, but such is life.
Overall we've been pleased with the system and, as another poster mentioned, now can't imagine life without at least some type of alarm. The world is just getting too insane.
Hope this helps!
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dean_33
33 Messages
4 years ago
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