For the past decade, we have been doing automotive stuff where UL/CSA/CE is a non issue.
However I want to manufacture some home LED lighting products that I would like to sell worldwide, so now it is an issue.
I have heard (and may be true or not), that using an external power supply, such as a 12VDC mains adapter exempts the product which runs on 12V from having to bear CE/UL labeling, and that as long as you use a UL/CE/CSA approved AC->DC adapter, you are OK. From a cursory reading of CE directives, this appears to be true, since the CE has a "voltage directive" which covers devices running on 50-1000VAC or 75-1500VDC.
However, I know there are other aspects like electromagnetic interference... but if one designs a product that runs on 12VDC and runs from a AC->DC adapter which is already FCC/CE/UL/CSA approved, does there need to be additional testing done? (the devices in question would not use wifi/bluetooth just LED lighting)? What if the device contained a switching regulator inside - does it then need some form of testing that it would not without one?
Would be nice if there was some sort of "idiots guide to certification" somewhere
