A smoke detector wired incorrectly protects no one. Worse, it gives families false confidence — the dangerous kind that costs lives when seconds matter most.
At Aubut Electrical Service, smoke detector installation isn't a 20-minute upsell tacked onto another job. It's a code-driven, room-by-room safety installation handled by licensed electricians who treat every alarm as life-safety equipment — because that's exactly what it is.
Homes in Pacifica are built across decades of code revisions. A house from the 1970s wasn't required to have interconnected alarms. A 1995 build may have hardwired units with no battery backup. A 2018 home likely has both, plus combination CO units in sleeping areas. We don't guess which standard applies to your property — we verify it, document it, and bring the system into full compliance.
Every property we work in gets a service plan matched to its wiring age, layout, and occupancy. Below are the installations we handle most often. The list isn't a menu — it's a starting point. The actual scope is decided after we walk the home.
Hardwired alarms run off the home's electrical system with battery backup, and they're the standard for new construction and major renovations. We pull dedicated circuits where required, set junction boxes at code-mandated heights, and mount detectors in every sleeping room, outside each sleeping area, and on every level — including basements and finished attics. When existing wiring is salvageable, we use it. When it isn't, we say so before we cut a single wire.
Common scenarios where this service fits: post-renovation safety upgrades, real estate compliance work, and homes that currently rely on battery-only units that residents keep silencing.
Not every home in Pacifica, CA needs a hardwired retrofit. Older properties with plaster walls, finished ceilings, and no attic access often make wireless interconnected alarms the smarter call. When one alarm triggers, every alarm in the network sounds — same end result as hardwired interconnection, far less drywall damage. We program the network, test every unit's communication range, and label each device by location for easy maintenance.
Sleeping areas need both. The detectors that handle both jobs in one unit are the practical choice for most homeowners, but they require correct placement — not too close to the bathroom, not too close to the kitchen, not directly above heating vents. We install combo units in code-compliant positions and document the locations in writing.
Two-story homes with finished basements introduce real wiring complexity. Running a continuous interconnect circuit from a basement utility panel to a third-floor bedroom isn't a job for guesswork. Our residential electricians map the existing topology, identify the cleanest fish-tape path, and minimize patch-and-paint work. Most multi-story retrofits in Pacifica are completed in a single day.
Chirping at 2 a.m. that the homeowner can't silence. A unit ripped off the ceiling during a kitchen fire scare. A detector that failed self-test on the morning of a home inspection. Our 24 hour electrician service covers all of it. We arrive with multiple unit types in stock so the home isn't left unprotected overnight.
Wi-Fi connected detectors notify residents on their phones, even when no one is home. We install Nest Protect, First Alert Onelink, and similar units, integrate them with existing smart home hubs in Pacifica households, and verify alert routing before we leave the property.
We count existing units, note their ages (most expire after 10 years and homeowners rarely realize it), check current placement against current code, and identify any rooms missing required coverage.
You see the count, the unit type, the placement, and the price before any work begins. Nothing gets added mid-job without your approval.
Clean, drop-cloth-protected, and quiet. We test every detector individually, then test the interconnect network as a whole, then walk you through silencing, testing, and battery replacement before we leave.
You receive a labeled diagram of every detector location, expiration dates for each unit, and a service record that satisfies most insurance documentation requirements in Pacifica, CA.
A family moves into a 30-year-old home in a quiet residential pocket of Pacifica, CA. The inspection report flagged "smoke detectors present and operational." Six months in, the bedroom alarm starts chirping no matter how many batteries get swapped. Turns out, every detector in the house was installed by the original builder in 1994, expired in 2004, and has been running on goodwill ever since.
We replaced all eleven units, brought interconnection up to current code, and installed CO combo units outside the two sleeping areas.
This pattern repeats across older neighborhoods in Pacifica more than most homeowners realize.
"I called about one chirping detector and ended up learning that every alarm in our house was past expiration. The electrician walked me through the dates printed on each unit before he ever quoted anything. We replaced all of them. It cost more than I expected, but he showed me why, and I'd do it again. Calm, patient, knew his stuff."
"Had a small kitchen fire scare and the detector outside the bedroom never went off. Aubut sent someone the next morning. Found out the unit was hardwired but the interconnect wire had been disconnected during a remodel years ago. Fixed it, tested it, charged a fair price. The technician didn't make me feel stupid for not knowing."
"We had a small hiccup — one of the new detectors failed self-test about a week after install. They came back the same day, swapped it out, no charge, no argument. That's the part most companies get wrong. They got it right."
Most people install smoke detectors based on intuition: high on the wall, in the hallway, near the bedrooms. Intuition gets a few things right and several things wrong.
Steam from showers triggers the optical sensor in photoelectric units, which leads to nuisance alarms, which leads to homeowners disabling the unit. A code-compliant install keeps detectors at least ten feet from bathroom doors when possible.
Smoke rises and pools, but it pools below the peak — typically four to twelve inches below — depending on slope. Mounting at the very top means smoke takes longer to reach the sensor.
The most common mistake in Pacifica homes. CO is heavier than smoke at room temperature and disperses differently. A combo unit installed at smoke-detector height may not detect CO accumulation at sleeping-level the way a wall-mounted CO detector at outlet height would.
If you're not sure whether your current setup meets code, whether your detectors are still in their service window, or whether interconnection is even possible in your home — call us. We'll walk through it. No pressure, no upsell.
The goal is for you to understand what you have before you spend a dollar fixing it. Aubut Electrical Service handles smoke detector installation across every neighborhood in Pacifica, CA, and we'd rather you make an informed decision than a fast one.
Licensed electricians. Written scope. Full documentation. 24-hour emergency service. Serving every neighborhood in Pacifica, CA.