Severity
Moderate
CPSC recall · Reported February 11, 2015
The detectors can fail to detect carbon monoxide gas in the home, posing a risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.
System Sensor, of St. Charles, Ill. recalled This recall involves System Sensor i4 series combination carbon monoxide/smoke detector m… — a moderate-severity action.
System Sensor Recalls Combination Carbon Monoxide and Smoke Detectors Due to Carbon Monox… was recalled by System Sensor, of St. Charles, Ill. in February 11, 2015. Reason: The detectors can fail to detect carbon monoxide gas in the home, posing a risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.. Remedy: Consumers should immediately contact System Sensor to obtain a free replacement combinati…. Verify recall #15077 with the CPSC before acting.
The recall
System Sensor, of St. Charles, Ill. issued this moderate-severity CPSC recall — The detectors can fail to detect carbon monoxide gas in the home, posing a risk of carbon monoxide poisoning..
Sourced from official CPSC enforcement records. Verify recall #15077 with the agency before acting. Full product description, hazard, remedy, and related recalls are below.
This CPSC action (record #15077) was formally reported on February 11, 2015. It is classified under Moderate severity, with a current status of Active. System Sensor, of St. Charles, Ill. is listed as the recalling firm. Federal records list the affected scope as About 1,450.
The documented reason for this recall is: The detectors can fail to detect carbon monoxide gas in the home, posing a risk of carbon monoxide poisoning. Distribution information was not included in the agency filing, so consumers should assume broad potential exposure until the firm publishes point-of-sale details. The remedy documented by the agency is: Consumers should immediately contact System Sensor to obtain a free replacement combination CO/smoke detector. Consumers should keep using the recalled detectors until replacement detectors are insta… — consumers holding this product should act on that instruction rather than relying on general guidance.
Within the same product category the archive holds 6 closely related recalls — clustering in a narrow category often points to a systemic quality-control or supplier issue rather than a one-off defect. Always verify the recall number against the official agency record before acting.
Where this recall sits in its category — 9,301 vehicles recalls on record
Of 100,165 recalls in the database, 23,668 are high severity, 72,097 moderate, and 4,400 low. This recall is classified moderate severity.
Counts reflect market size and reporting activity, not inherent danger — we do not rank products by risk from raw recall volume.
Severity
Moderate
Affected scope
About 1,450
Related Recalls
6
0 from same agency
This recall involves System Sensor i4 series combination carbon monoxide/smoke detector models COSMO-2W and COSMO-4W manufactured between 9/3/14 and 9/13/14. The detectors are round, white, and measure about 5.5 inches in diameter. Recalled units have date codes 4091 or 4092 printed on the lower left-hand corner of the label affixed to the back of the product and on the packaging.
The detectors can fail to detect carbon monoxide gas in the home, posing a risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.
Consumers should immediately contact System Sensor to obtain a free replacement combination CO/smoke detector. Consumers should keep using the recalled detectors until replacement detectors are installed.
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Agency | U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission |
| Severity class | Moderate |
| Status | Active |
| Recall number | 15077 |
| Date reported | February 11, 2015 |
| Date initiated | February 11, 2015 |
| Recalling firm | System Sensor, of St. Charles, Ill. |
| Affected scope | About 1,450 |
| Distribution | Not disclosed |
| Official source | CPSC notice → |
Profile values are sourced directly from the official CPSC enforcement record. Source: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.
What to do with this recall
Consumers should immediately contact System Sensor to obtain a free replacement combination CO/smoke detector. Consumers should k…
This page summarizes the official CPSC record for research and awareness; it is not legal, medical, or safety advice. Verify with the issuing agency before acting.
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Source: FDA, CPSC, and NHTSA federal recall databases. This recall: CPSC, reported February 11, 2015.
Recall information is sourced from official federal agency databases. Always verify recall details with the issuing agency for the most current status. This information is for research and awareness purposes only.
Every figure on PlainRecalls is rendered directly from official FDA, CPSC and NHTSA recall records — no number is typed in by an editor. Severity classes follow each agency's own taxonomy (FDA Class I/II/III; CPSC and NHTSA by hazard type), and related-recall context is computed across the full archive. See our editorial standards & corrections policy, the methodology behind these numbers, or report a data error. Data current as of June 2026.