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More emergency lighting! For the building inspectors out there. Here is an excerpt from the NEC on this subject. Are you coordinating your building and electrical inspectors for these systems????
700.16 Emergency Illumination. See related ULEmergency illumination shall include all required means of egress lighting, illuminated exit signs, and all other lights specified as necessary to provide required illumination.
Emergency lighting systems shall be designed and installed so that the failure of any individual lighting element, such as the burning out of a lamp, cannot leave in total darkness any space that requires emergency illumination.
Where high-intensity discharge lighting such as high- and low-pressure sodium, mercury vapor, and metal halide is used as the sole source of normal illumination, the emergency lighting system shall be required to operate until normal illumination has been restored.
Exception: Alternative means that ensure emergency lighting illumination level is maintained shall be permitted.
High-intensity discharge (HID) fixtures take some time to start once they are energized. Therefore, if HID fixtures are the sole source of normal illumination in an area, the Code requires that the emergency lighting system operate not only until the normal system is returned to service but also until the HID fixtures provide illumination. This may require a timing circuit, photoelectric monitoring system, or the equivalent.