Aico 3000 Series smoke and heat alarms ready for installation

CJA Electrical fits Aico smoke and heat alarm systems across Strood and the wider Medway area. As an Aico Expert Installer — manufacturer-trained on the 3000 Series — the kit goes in correctly first time, with proper interlinking, the right grade of fitting per location, and a BS 5839-6 certificate at the end. Most Strood domestic installs run as a single-visit job.

What Alarms actually is

Smoke alarm systems split by power source and by interlinking method. Power: Grade D1 (mains + sealed 10-year battery) is the default for new installs in Strood domestic property. Battery- only alarms (Grade F) are still acceptable in some scenarios but are end-of-life as a primary smoke alarm strategy. Interlinking: hard-wired (a third interconnect wire between fittings, used where new wiring is being run anyway) or radio- frequency (alarms talk to each other wirelessly, used where rewiring isn’t practical). Both methods are equally compliant; the choice depends on the property and whether walls/ceilings are being opened up for any other reason.

When you need Alarms in Strood

The triggers for new alarm installation work in Strood: a rented property compliance check (the 2022 amendment regs require minimum coverage), an HMO licence application or renewal (council typically specifies a higher BS 5839-6 grade), a sale or purchase where the surveyor flags inadequate smoke detection, a kitchen renovation needing a heat alarm, or simply a homeowner deciding it’s time to retire the 1990s battery-only alarms. For new-build property the original installer will have fitted the system, but those alarms reach end-of-life around 8-10 years in (battery-backed Grade D1) and need replacement on a similar cycle. We swap end-of-life alarms on a like-for-like basis where the existing layout and grading is sound.

Inside a fully wired domestic consumer unit
Inside a fully wired domestic consumer unit

Standards and what compliance looks like

BS 5839-6 covers domestic smoke alarms; BS 5839-1 covers larger non-domestic systems (used on HMO common parts where the building is large enough to fall outside Part 6 scope). Both are referenced by Medway Council and by fire risk assessors when inspecting alarm systems. Within BS 5839-6, the grading system runs A through F. Most Strood domestic installs are Grade D1 (mains-wired with sealed 10-year battery backup, interlinked) — that’s the default for new builds and the standard for most rental compliance. HMO and larger conversions step up to Grade C or Grade A panel systems depending on the council assessment.

Fittings and where they go

The fitting-level breakdown on a typical Strood three-bed domestic install: First floor landing — Aico Ei3016 optical smoke alarm. Ground floor hallway — Aico Ei3016 optical smoke alarm, interlinked with the upstairs unit. Kitchen — Aico Ei3014 heat alarm. Smoke alarms false-trigger on cooking smoke; heat alarms only trigger on actual temperature rise. Boiler cupboard or near gas/wood-burner — Aico Ei3018 CO alarm where there’s a fixed combustion appliance. All units interlink wirelessly via SmartLINK; the install signs off on a BS 5839-6 certificate.

Multifunction tester measuring end-to-end resistance on a ring final circuit
Multifunction tester measuring end-to-end resistance on a ring final circuit

Testing schedule and remedials

Testing schedules on the systems we install: Monthly — householder press-test of each alarm. Confirms the alarm sounds and the interlink fires the others. Annually — competent-person inspection. We test each alarm, check the supply, verify the interlink, replace any end-of-life units, and issue a BS 5839-6 service record. End-of-life — Aico 3000 Series alarms have a sealed 10-year battery and a 10-year unit lifespan. End-of-life is signalled by the alarm’s status indicator a few months before expiry, giving plenty of warning to schedule replacement.

Why Strood property owners book CJA Electrical

Aico Expert Installer status matters because alarm installation isn’t just “screw the unit to the ceiling and plug it in”. Siting, interlinking method, kitchen versus hallway placement, CO alarm proximity to combustion appliances — there are real install decisions that affect whether the system actually performs in a fire. Manufacturer training is what makes those decisions consistent. CJA Electrical is based in Rochester and covers smoke alarm work across Medway. Strood sits within the 8-minute working radius. The 3000 Series is the kit we install by default, the BS 5839-6 certificate goes out same-day after install, and we stand behind the work.

How the work runs

The flow from first contact to final certificate: Initial chat to confirm property type, number of floors, and any specific requirements (HMO licence specification, agent requirements, particular alarm grade required by an insurer). Site visit (free, normally 30 minutes) to walk through the property, identify alarm positions, and finalise the spec. Quote within a working day — fixed-price for most domestic work, capped quote for larger HMOs. Install on agreed date — single visit for most domestic; larger HMO installs may run across two visits. Demonstration and certificate at completion — householder walked through monthly test, given the logbook, supplied with the BS 5839-6 PDF.

What affects the price

Domestic smoke alarm installation pricing depends on the number of alarms, the interlinking method, and any consumer unit work needed. For most Strood three-bed homes the spec is 3-4 alarms (smoke on landing, smoke on hallway, heat in kitchen, plus CO if there’s a fixed combustion appliance), interlinked wirelessly, with a single new circuit if the existing wiring doesn’t support the install. The fixed price covers the alarms, interlinking, install labour, and the BS 5839-6 certificate. Larger HMO and multi-property installs are quoted on a capped basis after a site survey, with portfolio pricing available for letting agents and managing landlords.

FAQs

Why Aico specifically?

Aico are the UK market leader in residential smoke alarms and the manufacturer most fire risk assessors and councils across Medway are familiar with. The 3000 Series is the current generation — interlinkable mains-wired alarms with sealed 10-year batteries — and we’re manufacturer-trained on the range as Aico Expert Installers. The kit performs reliably in real fires.

How long do mains-wired alarms last?

Aico 3000 Series alarms are designed for a 10-year service life with sealed batteries that last the same period. The alarm itself signals end-of-life via its status indicator a few months before expiry, giving plenty of warning to schedule replacement. Older alarms (pre-3000 Series) often have shorter lives, particularly fluorescent bulkhead-style units which were typically rated for 8-10 years.

Can you install in occupied property without making a mess?

Yes. Most Strood domestic installs run as a single-visit half-day job with minimal disruption. Wireless interlinking means no need to chase wires through walls between alarms; the install is mostly about mounting alarms to ceilings and connecting each to a power supply. Dust sheets out, vacuum on the way out.

What’s the difference between heat and smoke alarms?

Smoke alarms detect smoke particles in the air and trigger on combustion. Heat alarms detect temperature rise (typically triggering at 58°C or more) and don’t false-trigger on cooking smoke or steam. Heat alarms go in kitchens; smoke alarms go everywhere else. Multi-sensor alarms combine both and are useful in open-plan kitchen-diner layouts.

Do I need a CO alarm too?

If the property has any fixed combustion appliance — gas boiler, gas fire, wood burner, oil boiler — yes. The Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (Amendment) Regulations 2022 require a CO alarm in any room used as living accommodation where there’s a fixed combustion appliance. We fit Aico Ei3018 CO alarms as part of the same install, interlinked with the smoke alarms.

What documentation do I get after the install?

A BS 5839-6 certificate documenting the install — alarm types, locations, interlink method, supply, and the commissioning test result. Plus a logbook for ongoing monthly test records that stays at the property. The certificate is what fire risk assessors, councils, insurers, and (for landlord property) tenants will expect to see.

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Frequently asked questions

Why Aico specifically?

Aico are the UK market leader in residential smoke alarms and the manufacturer most fire risk assessors and councils across Medway are familiar with. The 3000 Series is the current generation — interlinkable mains-wired alarms with sealed 10-year batteries — and we're manufacturer-trained on the range as Aico Expert Installers. The kit performs reliably in real fires.

How long do mains-wired alarms last?

Aico 3000 Series alarms are designed for a 10-year service life with sealed batteries that last the same period. The alarm itself signals end-of-life via its status indicator a few months before expiry, giving plenty of warning to schedule replacement. Older alarms (pre-3000 Series) often have shorter lives, particularly fluorescent bulkhead-style units which were typically rated for 8-10 years.

Can you install in occupied property without making a mess?

Yes. Most Strood domestic installs run as a single-visit half-day job with minimal disruption. Wireless interlinking means no need to chase wires through walls between alarms; the install is mostly about mounting alarms to ceilings and connecting each to a power supply. Dust sheets out, vacuum on the way out.

What's the difference between heat and smoke alarms?

Smoke alarms detect smoke particles in the air and trigger on combustion. Heat alarms detect temperature rise (typically triggering at 58°C or more) and don't false-trigger on cooking smoke or steam. Heat alarms go in kitchens; smoke alarms go everywhere else. Multi-sensor alarms combine both and are useful in open-plan kitchen-diner layouts.

Do I need a CO alarm too?

If the property has any fixed combustion appliance — gas boiler, gas fire, wood burner, oil boiler — yes. The Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (Amendment) Regulations 2022 require a CO alarm in any room used as living accommodation where there's a fixed combustion appliance. We fit Aico Ei3018 CO alarms as part of the same install, interlinked with the smoke alarms.

What documentation do I get after the install?

A BS 5839-6 certificate documenting the install — alarm types, locations, interlink method, supply, and the commissioning test result. Plus a logbook for ongoing monthly test records that stays at the property. The certificate is what fire risk assessors, councils, insurers, and (for landlord property) tenants will expect to see.

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