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-   -   See China's new fighter jet in action (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=228217)

Jimbuna 11-01-16 11:42 AM

See China's new fighter jet in action
 
Bit of a copycat but that's nothing unusual these days.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/video_and_...lines/37831721

eddie 11-01-16 11:49 AM

Looks kind of familiar,lol Wouldn't trust its reliability though.

Oberon 11-01-16 11:56 AM

No surprises there, it's the popular design for gen 5 fighters. I think the only one doesn't look like that is Japans X-2 Shinshin which looks a bit more like an F-15.

Jimbuna 11-01-16 11:57 AM

Probably full of Vacuum tubes (Thermionic valves) :O:

Oberon 11-01-16 12:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimbuna (Post 2443915)
Probably full of Vacuum tubes (Thermionic valves) :O:

Good against EMPs. :yep:

Jimbuna 11-01-16 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oberon (Post 2443925)
Good against EMPs. :yep:

But not so good against AIM and RIM-7 Sparrows :03:

Skybird 11-01-16 12:58 PM

China will be the enemy in the next big war. Underestimating their ability and determination to shorten further the technology gap until then, and to sharpen their fangs and claws until then, to me does not look like a strategy that promises to win the future.

So with more soberness:

It flies. Its relatively heavy. Not more and not less we see. Inner qualities of the J-20 are not revealed. - Many chips in American weaponry are made in China. The US military potence in the region since years is loosing in lead over China. A victory in a regional war right now already cannot be taken for granted anymore.

Oberon 11-01-16 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimbuna (Post 2443926)
But not so good against AIM and RIM-7 Sparrows :03:

Depends on how many of them you have. Don't forget the highly technical and over-engineered Tiger tank and how well that worked when it was buried underneath T-34s. :doh:

Oberon 11-01-16 01:24 PM

http://funnypictures1.fjcdn.com/pict...b3_5851490.jpg

Jimbuna 11-01-16 01:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oberon (Post 2443940)
Depends on how many of them you have. Don't forget the highly technical and over-engineered Tiger tank and how well that worked when it was buried underneath T-34s. :doh:

LOL that, I knew you'd come up with that but on a more serious note, I still believe they are lacking in quality and numbers.

Perhaps in a decade or so :hmmm:

Oberon 11-01-16 01:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimbuna (Post 2443943)
Perhaps in a decade or so :hmmm:

They're patient, so long as their economy doesn't collapse then they have time to spare. :yep:

Commander Wallace 11-01-16 03:54 PM

It flies in the video and can maneuver. The real question is it's effectiveness in air combat. The U.S, U.K, France ,Russia and others have more experience with combat fighter aircraft. If China does close the gap then it may come down which country has the better air crew training regimen. The effectiveness of the missile armament is part of the equation as well.

By the way jim, the sparrow missile is a Aim-7. it's a medium-range semi-active radar homing air-to-air missile. I'm sure it was a typo. :yep:

mapuc 11-01-16 04:17 PM

A little derailing from the main discussion

Someone mentioned Sparrow and AIM. Those AAW weapons was second, third and fourth generation AAW Weapons. The newest AIM 120D something is a fifth generation AAW weapons. the next generation is the Meteor

Markus

Commander Wallace 11-01-16 05:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mapuc (Post 2443965)
A little derailing from the main discussion

Someone mentioned Sparrow and AIM. Those AAW weapons was second, third and fourth generation AAW Weapons. The newest AIM 120D something is a fifth generation AAW weapons. the next generation is the Meteor

Markus


The Aim-120 missile is an Amraam which is short for advanced medium range air to air missile.

The Meteor Missile is an active radar guided beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile (BVRAAM)

Quote: MBDA is a European developer and manufacturer of missiles. It was formed by a merger of French Aérospatiale-Matra Missiles, Italian Alenia Marconi Systems and British Matra BAe Dynamics in December 2001. In 2015 the company had 10,000 employees.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteor_(missile)

Platapus 11-01-16 05:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oberon (Post 2443940)
Depends on how many of them you have. Don't forget the highly technical and over-engineered Tiger tank and how well that worked when it was buried underneath T-34s. :doh:


Didn't Stalin say that quantity was a quality in itself?

Skybird 11-01-16 05:39 PM

The mhigher advanced general technology levels become, the smaller the tech gap between leading and trailing powers becomes.

And the more irrelevant pilot quality becomes. In WWII and Korea, dogfighting skills and team tactics were of paramount importance. With the ground-launched SAMs and plane-carried missiles, this importance already suffered a blow in Vietnam. Retraining pilots and adapting to the new thgreats, restablished that to some degree, but today missiles have a fail-safe quota and manouverability where human bodies and minds cannot compete anymore. Tehcnical adaption became even more important in defense against thgese wepoaons, but the more high tech gets distrubvuted on the globe, the lesser the advantages of those who technologically adapted first will be, and will shrink. The relevance of stealth fighters is niot as big anymore as it once was, thre advantage the Us had with these, is not as big anymore now that potential enemies have adapted to that in radar and missile technologies claimed to be potent enough to find stealthed aircraft (Russia).

I dare to make two predictions.

First, the decive wepaon of the next big wear will not be stealth aircraft and stealth ships, but RC-drones, cyberweapons, maybe even already autonomnous drones by then. The current fith egneraiton of fighter aircraft developed, possibly will be the last manned fighter aircraft ever being developed.

Second, the charm of superior numbers will become more important once again: the question who can suffer bigger losses without getting knocked out by them, the ability to replace losses, to be present in several places simultaneously - in physical, battle-potent presence. Tech advantages can compensate inferior numbers only to this or that degree, and not beyond that. And only if the tech leadership is sufficient enough. The smaller this lead is, the more relevant numbers become again.

(And numbers mean money. And money means the fiscal system and the messy state it is in. I think the forces needed to be victorious against China, the West will find impossible to fianbnce, since these forces must be buzild in peace times when the attractiveness of doing that is low - during war, the losses will increase rapidly, due to the lethality the next war will be fought with, and the aggressiveness).

The - I agree: very uncomfortable - conclusion? Logic demands that if this war is seen as inevitable anyway, we should launch it now while we still have a minor chance to win it. In the future we will find it impossible to win, most likely. If then we would not fight war and accept defeat, and we anticipate that already now, we agree already now in the porsent moiment to accept defeat and to give it all up and accept enemy's victory. Or does anyone believe China will hold back their ambitions? I once did, many years ago. I do not believe that anymore.

Life can be a bitch. But I am just stating the obvious conclusion.

Oberon 11-01-16 09:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Platapus (Post 2443973)
Didn't Stalin say that quantity was a quality in itself?

They do say so, not to say that the T-34 didn't have a quality of its own, it was a damn fine tank, especially the 85mm version, and part of its excellence was the ease of manufacture. Same goes for the Sherman, you guys could crank those babies out in the thousands, and they weren't terrible tanks, despite what Wehraboos will say.
Ultimately what it boils down to is production, manpower and logistics. Get those three right and the odds improve.

Of course, that's only in a conventional war... :dead:

Reece 11-01-16 09:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimbuna (Post 2443915)
Probably full of Vacuum tubes (Thermionic valves) :O:

They can make some good quality gear, they just sell their crap to us!!:yep:

I loved the old valve radio's, they had a good sound and plenty of beef!!:up:

Oberon 11-01-16 09:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skybird (Post 2443975)
Or does anyone believe China will hold back their ambitions? I once did, many years ago. I do not believe that anymore.

It's a tough one to consider, it's not easy to get into the mindset of the men of Beijing, but current attitudes seem to indicate no desire for a global military expansion, but more regional. Taiwan, Vietnam, the Philippines, Japan, Indonesia, even perhaps Australia would be viable targets, to basically push the US back to Hawaii and perhaps beyond.
In a way, I think China seeks to recreate the Greater Co-Prosperity Sphere...although if you said that to anyone in Beijing you'd be summarily executed.
The same goes for Russia, I don't see a desire in Putin to drive all the way to the Channel, but certainly he wants a buffer zone of pro-Russian states between Moscow and Berlin, and that's a very Russian viewpoint which comes from centuries of being the whipping boy for Europe.
That being said, there are some geopolitical strategic points which either China or Russia might be willing to go out of their comfort zone to engage in. For Russia that would be Syria, because of their investments in the area, and for China I think that would be Africa, because of resource gathering.

Ultimately, there are, I think, three or four factors that will spur conflict in the coming centuries.
The climate. Some argue that this was the spark which ignited the Syrian civil war. Droughts, flooding, that kind of thing, is going to prompt some governments to do things that they would not ordinarily do. The potential for North Korea to do something stupid because of a catastrophically bad harvest leading to internet unrest cannot be downplayed.
Resources. Not just things like oil, which some argue is a major factor for western decisions in recent years in the Middle East, but more basic things like water and land for farming. Also potentially base metals if we don't start mining outside the planet.
Social changes. We are running into a time where there are going to be a lot more people than there will be jobs for them to go into. That is unsustainable and is going to cause a lot of conflict, most likely not international conflict, but intranational. When you throw in other factors, such as wealth divide, racial division and of course our old favourite, religion, it's a nice tinder bed for people to kill people.

The nature of such wars will be as you have already said, an increasing bias towards machine based technology.

I would be hesitant though to suggest that it would be prudent to strike now. It is rare that any good comes of an empire trying to prolong its dominance through pre-emptive warfare. If anything it could hasten our decline. :hmmm:

Jimbuna 11-02-16 06:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Commander Wallace (Post 2443963)

By the way jim, the sparrow missile is a Aim-7. it's a medium-range semi-active radar homing air-to-air missile.

It sure is, I was trying to give an example of the ground-launched SAMs and plane-carried missiles.


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