Posted on 07/30/2015 5:55:15 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
Theres aircraft designers, and then theres ace designers. There are thousands of engineers around the world producing planes, but ace designers only come along once every few decades.
The United States had Kelly Johnson, the designer of the SR-71 Blackbird. Germanys Willy Messerschmitt produced a line of famous fighter planes. The Soviet Unions Mikhail Simonov created the muscular Su-27 fighter-bomber to compete with Americas F-15 Eagle.
Each of these aces were highly skilled, but they also owed much of their success to circumstance. They came along when their respective governments invested millions or billions of dollars into transforming brainpower into cutting-edge combat aircraft.
This intersection of engineering genius and lavish spending appears to have produced an ace designer in China. In recent years, an obscure engineer named Yang Wei has rapidly risen to the leadership of the Chengdu Aircraft Design Institute a major warplane manufacturer responsible for quickly churning out Beijings top warplanes.
Yang is principally responsible for two fighter jets that we know about. One of these is the J-20, Chinas first stealth fighter. He also headed the development of the JF-17 Thunder, a modern and evolutionary improvement of the early MiGs developed by the Soviet Union a half-century ago.
What we know about Yang is that he was born in 1963, and enrolled at the Northwestern Polytechnical University in 1978 at the age of 15. He completed two degrees and became a control systems engineer at Chengdu.
In a 2011 profile, the state-owned journal Science and Technology Daily described Yang as the brains behind Chinas 1980s innovations in electronic fly-by-wire controls. The journal credited him with implementing all-digital simulation tests for aircraft, breaking the blockade of foreign technology.
This is overstated, but theres no doubt Yang is highly influential. By the age of 35, he rose to Chengdus leadership and worked on the J-10, one of Chinas most numerous warplane types. The J-10 was a tricky aircraft to build and was beset by numerous design flaws, including a notable failure in its fuel system in the late 1990s. But Yangs solutions later worked their way into the JF-17; a practice known as parallel development, according to the journal.
In other words, what Yang seems to have done is establish an alternative philosophy to Western fighter design illustrated by the stealthy, but expensive and problem-prone F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. China now builds fighters cheaply, quickly and simply. This is not to say Yangs fighters are perfect or even fundamentally new.
J-20
Case in point is the Chengdu J-20. As a stealth fighter, this twin-engine, delta wing aircraft could be stealthier at least from behind. Which probably means its not principally an air-to-air dogfighter. But theres an ongoing debate about that. No one except its designers know what its supposed to do.
One school of thought has the J-20 acting as a long-range sniper, speeding directly toward U.S. reconnaissance planes and tankers and shooting them out of the sky. Without those support assets in the air, Americas ability to wage war in the western Pacific drops dramatically.
The J-20 is stealthy from the front see its angular features. But its also big at 62 feet long (about 19 meters). That befits more of a ground-attack role with some self-defense capabilities, which would also require a stealthy shape principally at the front.
Even then, it has its problems. Tiny canards, like little extra limbs, protrude from the forward half of the fuselage to add more aerodynamic stability. This appears to be an afterthought, as the canards reduce stealth, which means China still has work to do to make a near-undetectable aircraft comparable to American designs perhaps even Russian ones as well.
Another problem is that its underpowered considering its size and the fact that it wields twin AL-31F engines. Those engines are Russian and just a bit too weak for an aircraft that must balance speed and agility, which the J-20 appears to strive to do. Then theres the electronics and fire-control systems, both areas where Chinese innovations are lacking.
But it does represent a major leap for Chinese stealth airframe design which had heretofore been unable to produce a fighter of this kind at all. The Pentagon, for its part, drastically underestimated the timeline; it didnt expect a stealth fighter until later this decade at the earliest. China revealed it to the world in January 2011.
Chengdu has produced six prototypes. The designers are also taking J-20 and evolving it. The planes engine nozzles, one of the big giveaways to radar sweeps from behind, have been partially concealed on later prototypes. And Chengdu has apparently modeled its electro-optical targeting arrangement after the F-35. Other features, such as the front, resemble the U.S. F-22. Thats perhaps helped by data theft from Americas stealth fighter programs.
Plus, the J-20 will likely have an advantage over the F-35 in terms of speed and maneuverability owing to its large, delta wing design. What the J-20 lacks is a bigger, reliable engine. Particularly one thats not made in Russia. And, of course, the sensors to see targets at long range.
The J-20s size, range, and stealth could also make it a formidable long-range strike platform, particularly if bomb-carrying planes were mated with air-to-air missile-armed J-20s as part of a strike package to hit high-value targets in the vicinity of the first and second island chains, China military analysts Gabe Collins and Andrew Erickson noted in a 2011 paper (as PDF).
Now step back for a moment. This is not a game-changing warplane. But in a little more than a decade, China went from having no stealth warplanes to entering the select club of countries in the fifth-generation fighter business. Thats no small feat.
We can expect, owing to Yangs design philosophy, that whatever the J-20 becomes will not be radically different from what weve seen already.
JF-17
The JF-17 Thunder is a very interesting plane, if you like modern takes on classic Soviet-era fighters. You should.
The lineage is one the most interesting things about it. An upgrade of Chinas J-7 itself a copy of the workhorse MiG-21 the Thunder is indicative Chengdus evolutionary approach to fighter design. The JF-17 traces its basic framework all the back to the 1950s. Plus, at $25 million per unit, its a bargain compared to a $200 million F-35.
Chengdu designed this multi-role fighter which can dogfight and attack targets on the ground for export to the Pakistani air force.
The Thunder is roughly equivalent to the American F-16 Fighting Falcon, which is also in service with the Pakistani air force, but which cost twice as much per unit. The Thunder is not a stealth fighter. Far from it. But if an F-16 can beat an F-35 in a dogfight, then so can a JF-17.
This isnt your grandfathers MiG-by-another-name. For one, it has improved wings for greater maneuverability and a powerful Russian RD-93 turbofan engine. Another key difference is the shape of the nose. If you look at a MiG-21 or J-7, each has a rounded, inward-protruding engine air intake. This made sense when these fighters came about in the 1950s and 1960s, respectively, as both types had limited fire-control radars.
But as Chinese radar technology advanced, Chengdu moved the Thunders air intake into its fuselage, freeing up room for the Chinese-made KLJ-7 radar which has capabilities for both air-to-air and air-to-ground strikes.
Then theres the weapons. The fighter can carry quite a lot of weapons; about 3.6 tons worth. Its capable of firing beyond-visual range missiles and the Chinese-made C-802A anti-ship missiles designed to hit American aircraft carriers from 180 kilometers away. In Pakistani hands, the Indian Navy should worry.
In short, the JF-17 is cheap, powerful and doesnt try to reinvent the wheel. Its not going to transform air warfare. But its inexpensive and deadly enough for an air force on a budget to find attractive, especially if the alternative is a bank-breaking Western stealth jet.
Pakistan is the only current user, but the Thunder has emerged as Islamabads go-to fighter since it became operational in 2007. Part of this is political, as theres a limited base of customers for jointly-developed Chinese and Pakistani fighter planes.
There are reports Myanmar and Sri Lanka have ordered Thunders from Pakistan, but as with most arms sales, well believe it when we see it. A more serious problem is that the planes engine is Russian, which complicates the logistical supply chain. Any user who wants their fighters maintained must maintain good relations with the Kremlin.
For Chinas aviation industry, the continued reliance on foreign parts and particularly engines is one of its biggest liabilities. Beijings ace fighter designer might never overcome that.
The F-35 performing aerobatics.
And yes - they do have the communist red star on them!
The J-17 appears to be a knock off of the F-16.
Kelly Johnson, now there was a man with a big brain.
and a slide rule,
Just amazing.
Not a knockoff; it has legitimate American origins.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/j-7p.htm
And a really poor one at that, combined with an F-20 Tiger Shark. Makes for one ugly aircraft.
The J-20 appears to be 2x the size of the F-22 and F-35.
China doing what China does best, copying the US.
At some point, quantity tends to have a quality all its own...
Avionics are key. If this plane has short-range, easily spoofed radar that can’t engage may targets at once, then it’s going to have a rough time.
LMAO!! And the keys will fall out, too!
Normally I would agree, but considering they will build 100,000 of them and our top fighters will in the near future be flown by transgendered “female” pilots having a bad hair day...
I think the J-20 is designed to be a carrier killer. Big bomb bay for a huge or several anti-ship missiles.
I love your aviation posts.
"The controversy surrounding the F-35 is fundamentally an extension of the debate over what a future fighter should be. ......"
Or better yet, go directly to the source @ Belmont Club to read the whole article and discussions in the comment section.
They (ChiComm) don’t need to take on US directly.
Their military build up so far is for regional dominance.
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