WAYSOS COMPACT AIRE 3K
IS ILLEGAL AND NON-COMPLIANT

Published Specifications

View the full PDF specification at https://innovacopycats.com/waysos-specs

Failure to be Listed in the NRCan Searchable Product List

In Canada, all air-conditioning and heat-pump systems must be listed in the NRCan database. In fact, it is illegal to import or sell a unit that is not listed. At the time of this publication, March 16, 2026, the Waysos Compact Aire 3K was not listed in the NRCan Searchable Product List.

Failure to Meet NRCan Minimum Efficiency Requirements

Waysos Compact Aire 3K has a published rated capacity of 12,000 BTU in its brochure. Under federal law, any 12,000 BTU heat pump in this class must meet a 13.4 SEER2 or 9.3 CEER minimum to be legally sold, installed, or used in Canada. Waysos Compact Aire 3K publishes a fake SEER2 value in their documentation because the unit cannot meet the required 13.4 SEER2 when tested in a certified lab. This alone renders the units illegal.

Miscalculated Performance Numbers

Waysos misrepresents even the fabricated numbers it publishes for Compact Aire 3K in both heating and cooling.

In Cooling

Using their own watt input: 12,000 ÷ 1,209 = EER 9.93. Yet, Waysos Compact Aire 3K has a published EER of 10.5. Fraudulently lists the cooling capacity as 12,000 BTU with an EER of 10.5. When calculating the numbers, the EER of 9.93 is illegal. Can’t these cheaters do simple math??!!

In Heating

Using their own watt input: 11,970 ÷ 3.412 (BTU to W) ÷ 947 = 3.70 COP. Yet, Waysos Compact Aire 3K fraudulently publishes 3.5 COP. The calculated number looked too good to be real. None of the numbers they publish is consistent with their own data.

Fraudulent and Fake Numbers

The 12,000 BTU capacity they claim in printed brochures and technical documents, along with the 10.5 EER2 and 15.5 SEER2 ratings for the Waysos Compact Aire 3K, are fake and fraudulent. When tested in a lab, this unit will not produce 12,000 BTU and a 10.5 EER or a 15.5 SEER2. So, even ignoring the misclassification and wrong ratings, the actual numbers they claim are fake.

Here’s where it gets interesting. The manufacturer, Zymbo (China), lists the same numbers with the same mathematical errors. Zymbo claims the same unit, called Dolphin 40, has the same 12,000 BTU and a different efficiency of 10.5 EER. What’s even more fascinating is that Zymbo’s own internal calculations are inconsistent.

Here’s what Zymbo publishes:

In Cooling

Using their own watt input: 12,000 ÷ 1,209 = EER 9.93. Yet, Zymbo publishes 10.5 EER. The cooling capacity is fraudulently listed as 12,000 BTU with an EER of 10.5. When calculating the numbers, the EER2 is really 9.93, which is illegal.

Zymbo is manipulating the numbers. The numbers they initially published were too good to be true, so they simply “dumbed down” the efficiency and presented lower efficiency values. When Waysos published its own figures, it used the real (but still fake) numbers that Zymbo publishes when uploading data to the DOE website, then decided that a SEER2-to-15.5 looked good and appeared compliant.

For the Waysos Compact Aire 3K, the claimed 12,000 BTU capacity and 10.5 EER rating are false. When tested in a lab, this unit will not produce 12,000 BTU and an EER of 10.5. So, even ignoring the misclassifications and incorrect ratings, the actual numbers they claim are fake and inconsistent with expected test results.

Regulatory Violation Summary

Waysos Compact Aire 3K
Waysos Compact Aire 3K is illegal to distribute, specify, install, or use in the United States and Canada. Waysos’s published cooling and heating efficiency numbers are fabricated, mathematically impossible, and directly contradict what proper testing would show. Waysos Compact Aire 3K fails to meet DOE and NRCan minimum efficiency requirements under every applicable classification.

One Million Dollar Guarantee

We back the statement that the Waysos Compact Aire 3K cannot legally be sold, installed, or used in the United States with a One Million Dollar Guarantee.

Minimum Efficiency Requirements Not Met

MetricLegal Minimum RequiredSilktech's StatusResult
SEER2≥ 13.4Numbers fabricatedFails
HSPF2≥ 6.7Numbers fabricatedFails
CEER / SEER2NRCan minimumNot listed on the NRCan databaseFails
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These ratings cannot be made up. They must be established through testing in a genuine laboratory under the correct DOE and NRCan test procedures.

Database Status

DatabaseWaysos Compact Aire 3K
DOE Compliance Certification Management System (CCMS)Not listed
MAEDBNot listed
NRCan Searchable Product ListNot listed
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Submitting falsified efficiency data to a government database is not a path to compliance. It is a separate and aggravated violation — constituting the filing of false information with a federal regulator.

Faking Test Results

ViolationUS Law ViolatedCanadian Law Violated
Waysos fabricated laboratory test data rather than conducting legitimate testing under the required industry methods, AHRI 210/240 and ASHRAE 3710 CFR Part 429Energy Efficiency Act; Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
Published cooling efficiency numbers that are fabricated and mathematically impossible, and could not result from any legitimate test10 CFR Part 430Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
Published heating efficiency numbers that are fabricated and mathematically impossible, and could not result from any legitimate test10 CFR Part 430Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
Published efficiency numbers contradict basic mathematics — the stated heating and cooling values are physically impossible10 CFR Part 430Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
Waysos derived published performance ratings from non-compliant test conditions and failed to use the correct AHRI 210/240 and ASHRAE 37 test methods, rendering every efficiency rating ever published legally invalid10 CFR Part 429/430Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
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Selling Products That Should Not Be on the Market

ViolationUS Law ViolatedCanadian Law Violated
Waysos Compact Aire 3K does not meet minimum efficiency standards, exposing every distributor and dealer carrying the products to joint legal liability10 CFR Part 430MEPS under Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
Waysos Compact Aire 3K fails mandatory SEER2 minimum cooling efficiency thresholds because published numbers are falsifiedSEER2 under 10 CFR Part 430CEER under Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
Waysos Compact Aire 3K fails mandatory HSPF2 minimum heating efficiency thresholds because published numbers are falsifiedHSPF2 under 10 CFR Part 430Energy Efficiency Regulations, 2016
Waysos Compact Aire 3K is not listed on NRCan's searchable product database, meaning it was never legally cleared for import or interprovincial sale in CanadaNRCan Searchable Product Database; Energy Efficiency Act
Waysos Compact Aire 3K was never certified by an accredited certification body, and neither carries the mandatory compliance markDOE Certification under 10 CFR Part 429Standards Council of Canada Energy Efficiency Verification Mark
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Lying to Customers and Regulators

ViolationUS Law ViolatedCanadian Law Violated
Waysos Compact Aire 3K's efficiency and capacity ratings directly conflict with what government-certified testing would produce, and falsified data was submitted to official government databases10 CFR Part 429.12; 18 U.S.C. § 1001 — federal criminal offenceEnergy Efficiency Act — fines up to $10,000 per violation
Waysos misrepresented the certification and compliance status to customers, dealers, regulators, and certification bodies18 U.S.C. § 1001 — federal criminal offenseEnergy Efficiency Act offense
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Breaking Consumer Protection and Competition Laws

ViolationUS Law ViolatedCanadian Law Violated
False efficiency claims, illegal rating metrics, and misleading energy performance advertising — including the submission of falsified data to government databases — constitute deceptive trade practices exposing Waysos to regulatory action and civil lawsuits from competitors, including claims for damagesFTC Act Section 5, 15 U.S.C. § 45; Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)Competition Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-34
Maximum penalties for serious violations or refusal to take corrective actionFTC civil penalties up to $53,088 per violationEnergy Efficiency Act fines $10,000–$200,000
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