One of the things that we have been mildly concerned about for a long time is the ability to leave home safely in the event of a fire. Most of the house there is no problem as I figure you can always go out a first floor window and deal with the 6-8' drop to the ground if you have to. However our master bedroom is on the second floor, with only one open staircase - if there is a fire in the living room area, we would be stuck with a 16' drop to the ground out the bedroom window - not good...
We have been looking lately at some of the "escape ladders" designed for such situations - anyone have any opinions as to what works and what should be avoided?
There seem to be a lot of variations on the portable chain type ladders, such as (broken link removed to http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?storeId=10051&langId;=-1&catalogId=10053&productId=100071834) from Home Depot - what worries me is it's in a separate box that is likely to get burried in a closet somewhere, and be hard to find if one ever needed it. I also have images of fumbling on the deployment and dropping the whole thing out the window. Still they are relatively low cost, and are certainly better than nothing.
Another option I've found seems to be these guys selling their PEARL - Permanent Escape And Rescue Ladder - it's a box that mounts permanently in the wall under the window, with the top of the ladder permanently attached to the box. Thus you can't bury it in a closet, and the deployment looks a lot more fool proof - something I suspect would matter if trying to deal with being woken up in the middle of the night by a blaring smoke alarm, and trying to deal with an emergency while half asleep...
They claim to include an insulation sheet that goes behind the box, so that the unit offers the same insulation value as an "Energy Star Compliant" window.
Downside is a slightly more complex installation (I would have to move an electrical outlet for certain, and probably have to relocate the jack studs under the window...) and about $100 more in cost over the chain ladders, but seems to me like a better product otherwise...
Anybody have much experience with (hopefully not "applied") these sorts of escape ladders, or opinions on the subject?
I know it's a relatively low risk, but it isn't that expensive (And I think codes these days require a second exit in any case...)
Gooserider
We have been looking lately at some of the "escape ladders" designed for such situations - anyone have any opinions as to what works and what should be avoided?
There seem to be a lot of variations on the portable chain type ladders, such as (broken link removed to http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?storeId=10051&langId;=-1&catalogId=10053&productId=100071834) from Home Depot - what worries me is it's in a separate box that is likely to get burried in a closet somewhere, and be hard to find if one ever needed it. I also have images of fumbling on the deployment and dropping the whole thing out the window. Still they are relatively low cost, and are certainly better than nothing.
Another option I've found seems to be these guys selling their PEARL - Permanent Escape And Rescue Ladder - it's a box that mounts permanently in the wall under the window, with the top of the ladder permanently attached to the box. Thus you can't bury it in a closet, and the deployment looks a lot more fool proof - something I suspect would matter if trying to deal with being woken up in the middle of the night by a blaring smoke alarm, and trying to deal with an emergency while half asleep...
They claim to include an insulation sheet that goes behind the box, so that the unit offers the same insulation value as an "Energy Star Compliant" window.
Downside is a slightly more complex installation (I would have to move an electrical outlet for certain, and probably have to relocate the jack studs under the window...) and about $100 more in cost over the chain ladders, but seems to me like a better product otherwise...
Anybody have much experience with (hopefully not "applied") these sorts of escape ladders, or opinions on the subject?
I know it's a relatively low risk, but it isn't that expensive (And I think codes these days require a second exit in any case...)
Gooserider