Exit signs show the direction; emergency lights make the route survivable. In smoke, dust, or low visibility, the correct beam, wattage, and mounting height prevent hesitation and crowding at pinch points. This field guide helps you choose 30 W vs 60 W, manage beam overlap, define backup duration, and plan an upkeep schedule your team will actually follow.
Pair with route markers: Flameproof LED Exit Signage.
A slightly wide beam is better for corridors; a medium beam suits open bays. Avoid mounting directly in people’s faces at head height. Angle fixtures to spread light down the path, not at the opposite wall.
Choose a battery duration aligned to your evacuation time + margin. If your longest route takes 15 minutes in drills, select a backup comfortably beyond that, then test on schedule.
Visible egress combines:
Q1. 30 W vs 60 W, which is more energy efficient?
Both are efficient LEDs; choose based on height and area to avoid over- or under-lighting.
Q2. How close should fixtures be?
Close enough that beams overlap by ~20–30% on the floor.
Q3. Can I use the same fitting for indoor and outdoor?
Yes, if the housing and hardware are suitable. Keep optics clean; outdoor dust films reduce output.
Q4. How do I test without disrupting work?
Schedule short monthly tests at shift change; run one full discharge each quarter.
Send us a basic plan (even a photo with notes). We’ll suggest counts, wattages, mounting heights, and beam angles for an even, safe path. Start here: Flameproof LED Emergency Light (30W/60W) and Flameproof LED Exit Signage.
