If you set the 2 additional factors to 2-levels (5, 15 and 5, 30), then the experiment will only provide treatment combinations at those 2-levels. If you want to test the factors at more than 2-levels, you must specify this when you add N Factors.
Level setting depends a lot on where you are in your study. 2-level designs are quite typical in early investigations (often called screening designs). The levels are chosen far enough apart to have a wide inference space. Essentially you are increasing the chance of seeing a factor effect, of course, this is done for all of the factors to mitigate bias. 2-level designs will allow for first order model development as well as the ability to estimate interactions provided the design has enough resolution. As your study approaches "optimal", then typically some sort of RSM is used often with more than 3-levels for factors thereby being able to estimate complex non-linear relationships.
"All models are wrong, some are useful" G.E.P. Box