When you and your family scream with excitement as you rush up the roller coaster, overlook the city lights from the top of the Ferris wheel, or laugh out loud while being swung around on the rotating tower… have you ever wondered, even for a second, who is silently holding up this joy behind the scenes?
It’s not the lights, not the speed, not the special effects—it’s safety.
And “safety” is not something that falls from the sky; it’s built bit by bit by professionals with expertise, systems, and an almost obsessive level of rigor. Take Zhengzhou Qiangli Amusement Equipment Co., Ltd.—a company holding the national Class A special equipment manufacturing license. They may not stand in the spotlight, but before every ride starts, they eliminate all risks in the design drawings, weld seams, and screws.
Today, we won’t talk about marketing jargon or empty slogans. Instead, let’s peel back the surface of this “Class A qualification” and see what it’s truly worth and why it’s valuable.
Part I: Qualification? Not Just an “Entry Permit,” But a “Life-and-Death Contract”
Many people don’t know that large-scale amusement rides belong to “special equipment”—sounds pretty hardcore, right? From design, manufacturing, installation to operation, the entire process is closely monitored by the state.
According to the Special Equipment Safety Law and TSG 07-2019 Licensing Rules, only a handful of companies nationwide have obtained the “Class A manufacturing qualification.” This is not just a “passing grade,” but the “ceiling”—meaning that in all dimensions such as personnel configuration, production scale, testing capabilities, and quality control, they have passed the state’s rigorous “health check.”
The Class A certificate held by Qiangli Amusement is not a trophy to be hung on the wall, but a “life-and-death contract” signed for the entire society: We dare to pledge that every ride leaving our factory can withstand children’s screams and lovers’ embraces.
Part II: System? Not Just Words on Lips, But Actions Etched in Bone
Qualification relies on substantial capabilities; and substantial capabilities depend on the system—not flowcharts in PowerPoint presentations, but “muscle memory” that automatically runs before work starts every morning.
At Qiangli, safety is not just the quality control department’s responsibility—it’s everyone’s responsibility. From designers to welders, from procurement staff to after-sales service, 22 quality control steps are interconnected like precision gears.
Here are some examples of our “obsessive attention to detail”:
Design phase: A pin shaft? A weld seam? Don’t underestimate them. Safety factor? We max it out. It’s not “good enough,” but “it must hold up even during an earthquake.”
Procurement: Steel, motors, electrical control components—all come from “white list” suppliers. Every batch entering the factory must come with an “ID card” (quality assurance certificate). No certificate? Absolutely not allowed.
Production site: The 50,000-square-meter workshop isn’t for show—it’s the foundation for standardized operations. Welding? Must be performed by certified personnel, with process cards posted at workstations. Weld one seam, inspect one seam. It’s not “close enough,” but “100% non-destructive testing,” where even internal bubbles in weld seams are not overlooked.
Before shipment: Static tests? Dynamic tests? All arranged. Our KPI (Key Performance Indicator) isn’t “meeting deadlines,” but “100% factory pass rate”—not a single zero less.
Part III: Culture? Not Just Slogans on the Wall, But a Ruler in the Heart
If the system is the skeleton, then culture is the heartbeat.
At Qiangli Amusement, “Quality First, Safety Paramount, Customer Service, Continuous Improvement”—these sixteen characters are not just mantras recited by the boss in meetings, but the mutterings of welders tightening screws, the dilemmas of designers revising blueprints, and the confidence of quality inspectors rejecting a batch of products.
Behind the Class A qualification lies national standards and quality systems, but deeper still is a cultural awareness of “self-imposed pressure”—we are not satisfied with merely “complying,” we go “beyond the requirements”; we don’t just pursue “meeting standards,” we strive for “flawlessness.”
So, when you choose Qiangli, what are you really choosing?
Not just a supplier, but a sense of security that is “traceable, verifiable, and trustworthy.”
What we protect is not just steel and circuits, but the reputation of your park, the screams of your visitors, and the smiles captured in photographs.
Qiangli Amusement—making joy land steadily; making safety the default setting for