Focusun Debuts Snow Falling Machine and Snow Cannon Lineup at Shanghai Amusement Expo 2026
Focusun, a snow and ice entertainment equipment brand built on refrigeration engineering rather than event-production shortcuts, is exhibiting at the Shanghai Amusement Expo from July 8 to 10, 2026. On the show floor, the brand is presenting two flagship products — a landscape-style snow falling machine and a high-capacity snow cannon — alongside turnkey project support for snow parks, ski slope builds, and real ice rink construction.
Anyone evaluating a snow machine partner ahead of next season’s build-out will find the timing useful: rather than comparing spec sheets from a distance, visitors can watch both units run, question the engineers directly about site conditions, and review completed installations instead of marketing renderings.
What a Live Demo Reveals That a Spec Sheet Doesn’t
Most buyers researching a snow maker machine are really asking one question they can’t answer from a brochure: once the snow lands, does it look and behave like snow? Crystal size, melt rate, and how the fall pattern reads under venue lighting all shift depending on nozzle design, air handling, and ambient humidity — variables a static spec sheet can’t communicate. Focusun’s engineering team approaches this as a refrigeration problem first, tuning droplet size and freeze rate at the nucleation stage so the output settles and disperses like natural snowfall rather than reading as shaved ice or foam.
That distinction is most visible in the snow falling machine on display. Designed for overhead mounting in shopping malls, hotel lobbies, and themed retail environments, it produces a steady, gentle drift that visibly settles on the space below — dense enough to photograph well, dry enough that it doesn’t leave surfaces wet underfoot. Dialing in that balance has come from repeat installations across commercial venues in China and abroad, not a single fixed formula.
Engineered for Heat, Not Just Cold
One of the more common obstacles for operators in southern China, Southeast Asia, and parts of the Middle East is that standard snowmaking gear quits working once outdoor temperatures pass a fairly narrow ceiling. Focusun’s systems are built around this constraint directly, managing ice nucleation and heat rejection internally rather than depending on favorable wet-bulb conditions — which keeps snow output stable even above 35°C outdoors. That capability is what separates a seasonal winter attraction from a park that can run twelve months a year, and for most operators it matters more than any single snow-volume figure.
The snow cannon on display handles the other half of the equation: getting large ski slopes and open snow-park terrain covered fast. High throughput and wide dispersal let a park build up base snow ahead of opening day and keep up with foot traffic once the season is underway, without waiting on natural weather.
For projects that need the equipment to move rather than sit permanently in one room — a rotating seasonal display, a touring event, a temporary retail activation — Focusun also offers an indoor mobile snow machine configuration, built on the same falling-snow mechanics but designed to relocate between spaces without a fixed ductwork install.
A Manufacturing Background Buyers Can Verify
Focusun’s snow and ice product line is backed by more than a decade of refrigeration engineering experience, with projects delivered to over 11,000 customers across 56 countries and certifications including HACCP, FDA, and CE. That track record is relevant here for a specific reason: a snow park is a refrigeration build before it’s an entertainment build, and decisions made at the design stage — heat load calculations, insulation, drainage — are what determine whether the park still runs cleanly in its fifth season, not just its first. Past projects span indoor ski facilities in the Middle East, snow attractions for carnival operators in the United States, and domestic installations across provinces including Fujian, Guangdong, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Beijing, and Heilongjiang.
As a snow maker manufacturer, Focusun frames its offer around the full build cycle rather than a single machine: site evaluation, equipment specification, installation oversight, and after-sales maintenance support intended to keep a system reliable well past its first winter.
FAQ
Will this equipment run in hot, humid conditions? Yes. The systems shown at the expo are engineered to hold stable snow output in outdoor temperatures above 35°C, which is why they’re already deployed across warm-climate markets in southern China.
How is a snow falling machine different from a snow cannon? A snow falling machine produces a slow, continuous drift suited to indoor or landscaped settings, while a snow cannon is built for high-volume outdoor coverage across slopes and open terrain.
Can the snow machine relocate between venues? That’s exactly what the indoor mobile snow machine configuration is for — temporary installs, touring events, and rotating retail or seasonal displays.
What happens after installation — is there ongoing support? Focusun provides maintenance guidance and technical follow-up aimed at long-term stable operation, backed by the same engineering track record behind its HACCP-, FDA-, and CE-certified refrigeration projects.
Meet Focusun at Shanghai Amusement Expo 2026
Operators and investors planning a snow park, ski slope, or real ice rink project are welcome at the Focusun booth July 8–10 to see both machines running and talk through project details with the engineering team on-site. Can’t make it in person? Focusun is offering a 2026 Snow Park ROI Consultation — reach out to the engineering team to review site conditions, climate constraints, and budget ahead of next season.




