Published: 12:52, April 27, 2020 | Updated: 03:35, June 6, 2023
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Final checks for rocket complex at Wuhan base
By Zhao Lei

Two satellites for technological experiments are sent into space by a Kuaizhou-1A, or KZ-1A, carrier rocket from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China's Gansu province, Aug 31, 2019. (JIN LIWANG / XINHUA)

A manufacturing complex for China's Kuaizhou-series carrier rockets in Wuhan, Hubei province, will be put into operation soon, China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp, the major investor in the facility, said last week.

All the infrastructure for the Kuaizhou Rocket Complex at the Wuhan National Space Industry Base has been built and is undergoing qualification checks, the State-owned defense conglomerate said in a statement issued on Friday.

The Kuaizhou Rocket Complex at the Wuhan National Space Industry Base will have an initial production capacity of 20 Kuaizhou-series solid-propellant rockets a year, CASIC said

The 30-hectare complex includes factories, testing facilities, office buildings and a power station.

It will have an initial production capacity of 20 Kuaizhou-series solid-propellant rockets a year, CASIC said.

Infrastructure construction began in May 2017 and was scheduled to be completed before the end of February this year. However, the impact of the novel coronavirus outbreak led to the suspension of final preparations, which resumed in mid-March.

After the complex starts operation, CASIC will be able to assemble at least 10 Kuaizhou 1As and at least 10 Kuaizhou 11s a year, said Zhang Di, a senior rocket scientist and chairman of Expace Technology in Wuhan, a CASIC subsidiary that builds the Kuaizhou rockets.

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"If our rockets become more popular in the market and orders keep increasing, we can expand the annual production capacity to 30," he said.

The 20-meter-tall Kuaizhou 1A has a liftoff weight of about 30 metric tons. It is capable of sending a 200 kilogram payload into a sun-synchronous orbit, or a 300 kg payload into a low-Earth orbit.

Kuaizhou 11, a larger model under development, will be 25 meters tall, with a liftoff weight of 78 tons. It will be able to place a 1-ton payload into a sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of 700 kilometers, or a 1.5-ton payload into a low-Earth orbit.

CASIC said it will be China's largest and most powerful solid-propellant carrier rocket.

READ MORE: New rocket raring for busy launch schedule

Construction of the 68.8-square-kilometer Wuhan National Space Industry Base, China's first commercial space industry hub, began in the city's Xinzhou district in April 2017.

CASIC began to develop the Kuaizhou series in 2009 as a low-cost, quick-response product for the commercial space market. It is the largest solid-propellant rocket family in China, as opposed to the Long March series, which mainly uses liquid fuel.

The conglomerate has launched 10 Kuaizhou rockets: two Kuaizhou 1s and eight Kuaizhou 1As.

zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn