The diverse set of infrastructures from three disciplines has been successfully unified in a unique access provision system, with altogether 14 calls for proposals published and reviewed by the ChETEC-INFRA independent user selection panel. The coherence of the consortium was ensured by biweekly, inclusive video conferences. This was complemented by annual in-person General Assemblies (2022 Padova, Italy - 2023 Debrecen, Hungary - 2024 Strasbourg, France - 2025 Dresden, Germany), as well as many topical interactions and meetings. The project has provided 7875 hours of accelerator usage, 160 nights of telescope time, and 408,000 cpu hours of supercomputer time in its first two reporting periods. After the very successful SNAQs online scientific school series during the Covid-19 pandemic (1293 participants, 34% female, in 13 editions), ChETEC-INFRA went back to supporting in-person schools: It has provided support to 21 in-person scientific schools with over 1150 participants (35% female). The project instigated several new scientific schools for PhD students: the Nuclear Physics in Astrophysics school (2022 in Geneva, 2024 in Dresden, Germany - 2026 will be in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, but without ChETEC-INFRA support due to the end of the project), the ChETEC-INFRA Observational school (2023 and 2025 in Ondrejov, Czech Republic), the Nuclei in the Cosmos School (2023 in Daejon/Korea and 2025 in Girona/Spain), the i-process Nucleosynthesis school (2023 in Limassol, Cyprus), and the n_TOF Nuclear Physics Winter School (2024 in Saint-Gervais-les-Bains, France). Two new full-day outreach events for high school students, called Nuclear Astrophysics Masterclasses, have been developed, translated into eleven languages, and performed 34 times, reaching 700 students (20-50% female depending on the group) so far. A high number of scientific resources has been created and is now available and linked on the project web page www.chetec-infra.eu. These include six reports useful for practical aspects covering beams, targets, simulations, and industry contacts. Nine different databases have been created and are available via the web page, from nuclear reaction rates, stellar trajectories and solar models, to abundance corrections, and isotopic analysis results databases. The accessibility is guaranteed by online courses and tutorials, and there are several online tools on the web page helping guide experiments and interpret their results. Finally, 300 peer-reviewed papers with explicit ChETEC-INFRA acknowledgment have been published, and made available in green or gold open access.