
Wet Location Emergency Lights
Designed for outdoor or washdown areas with weatherproof, gasketed seals.
Know your classification before you buy: Class I Division 2 exit signs — flammable gases or vapors present under abnormal conditions; Class II Division 1 exit signs — combustible dust present during normal operation; Class II Division 2 exit signs — dust present under irregular or fault conditions.
A hazardous location is an area where flammable gases, vapors, dusts, or fibers could ignite. These spaces are categorized by the NEC (and referenced by OSHA) as Class I (gases/vapors), Class II (dusts), or Class III (fibers/flyings), and split into Division 1 or 2 based on how often the hazard is present.
Class I, Division 1 means explosive gases/vapors are present under normal operating conditions (e.g., paint booth interiors). Class I, Division 2 means they’re only present under abnormal conditions, like leaks or equipment failure (e.g., adjacent storage or piping areas).
Yes. Per UL 924 and NFPA 101, emergency lights—including explosion-proof models—must provide at least 90 minutes of illumination during a power outage.
Yes—choose units rated for harsh environments, such as NEMA 4X or IP66/IP67. These are suitable for outdoor, marine, wash-down, or corrosive areas (e.g., refineries, gas stations, food-processing lines).
Most hazardous-location emergency lights use LED heads for higher efficiency, long life, and lower maintenance compared with halogen.
Match the classification to your materials and how frequently they’re present. For example, active spray areas may be Class I, Div 1, while nearby storage or ventilation spaces may be Class I, Div 2. Confirm with your local fire marshal or building inspector.