Yes that is correct. My point was only that adhering to strict laws like that is pretty ingrained. But you are correct that you as a foreign consumer is not protected by those laws, so it is up to me to uphold my promise to the customer, and up to you to trust that I will.
Thorbjorn, I can not think of a start up loudspeaker company that I want to see succeed more than yours.
I think the American market is potentially your biggest market, as North America has larger rooms than elsewhere. However the American market is now very much married to AV, especially so this forum.
Now, people have a hard time seeing dead ends. The dead end I'm referring to is the absurdity of a 15 channel receivers, at 7 odd K a pop, weighing 75 lb.! There are going to be some very sore heads, and unhappy customers, when on of those 30 plus power transistors goes short circuit and the whole contraption goes into protect mode just out of warranty. Sure as night follows day, quite a few will, given past experience. So the need for active speakers is now greater than ever.
The market is shifting to AV. This is true right across the spectrum. More and more orchestras are going on line. The BPO leading the way with high quality loss less audio, and they are now getting the hang of their Atmos recordings. Opera is an absolute fit for AV.
So that brings me to advise you that you really do need to introduce an active center as soon as possible. You already have a huge advantage as your systems have coaxial drivers as a core part of the design. Being active is a huge plus, as a center speaker has to be placed where it has to be. So this makes a standard passive crossover a severe limitation, as the handling of the transition frequency is different for literally every customer and different if that customer changes rooms, or moves house. Being able to customize this is crucial to exemplary speech intelligibility and all round performance. My experience with AV has driven that home to me.
I do hope your driver supply is secure. The one time I ventured into speaker production was with my design that won the audiophile sound off run by Stereophile. There was assistance to get production going. The key to the design was a certain Focal driver. That driver was discontinued by Focal before the end of the first production run! So that ended that endeavor for me.
I do think you need some sort of presence in America if this is to succeed. I trust your design is easily user serviceable, so that a failed driver or electronic failure could be quickly solved by the customer by just swapping driver, or the electronics. This would be a massive advantage over receivers, for which service is a nightmare.
So I think you will need at a minimum a US location for parts, so that customers have a quick turnaround via UPS or FedEx, not have to ship and receive internationally.
These are my thoughts, and I will send you a PM later.