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Russian fighter jets intercept U.S. F-22 Raptor flying over Syria

Congested? Dude. Have you seen WW2 skies? Thousands of planes.
WW2 era aircraft were slow, and clashes took place across entire Europe and many other regions (huge airspace and geography).

Here in Syria, situation is entirely different. Aircraft really fast and territory really small, and lot of activity in the air from time-to-time. F22 pilots are known to make their aircraft visible to Russian, to ensure that relevant boundaries are not crossed.
 
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WW2 era aircraft were slow, and clashes took place above entire Europe and many other regions (huge battlefield, geography wise).

Here in Syria, situation is entirely different. Aircraft really fast and territory really small, and lot of activity in the air.

F22 pilots are known to make their aircraft visible to Russian, to ensure that relevant boundaries are not crossed.

You have no idea planes fly in 3D space, not in 2D space.
 
Absolutely.

F-22 Raptor can see another non-equivalent aircraft from over 400 KM away and shoot it down ASAP.

This ain't Hollywood.The laws of physics were discovered by the early 1900s. If they could have made a stealth plane, they would have done it in WW1.
 
A Su-35S air-superiority fighter jet of Russia’s Aerospace Force has intercepted and visually identified the U.S. F-22 Raptor Raptor combat aircraft flying over Syria.

A photographs posted by unofficial Russia’s military pilot Instagram account on 24 September has confirmed an intercept of the U.S. F-22 Raptor Raptor combat aircraft by the Russian Su-35S fighter jet.

DnxQFfQXgAAe7LH-min-1-873x570.jpg


Photographs, made by the infrared search and track fire control system of the Russian Su-35S, shows in infrared spectrum an F-22 Raptor fighter jet flying over Syria.




The Su-35S infrared search and track system called the OLS-35 and includes an infrared sensor, laser rangefinder, target designator and television camera. This system to determine the general position of aircraft within a fifty-kilometer radius—potentially quite useful for detecting stealth aircraft, such as F-22, at shorter ranges.

The systems scans the airspace ahead of the jet for heat signatures caused by aircraft engines and/or plane’s surface friction caused by the aircraft flying through the air.

According to the Deagel.com, OLS-35 comprises a heat-seeker, a laser rangefinder/designator with new algorithms and advanced software to outperform its predecessor installed on the Su-27/Su-30 aircraft family. The Su-35 IRST is superior to the OEPS-27 in terms of range, precision and reliability.
 
A Su-35S air-superiority fighter jet of Russia’s Aerospace Force has intercepted and visually identified the U.S. F-22 Raptor Raptor combat aircraft flying over Syria.

A photographs posted by unofficial Russia’s military pilot Instagram account on 24 September has confirmed an intercept of the U.S. F-22 Raptor Raptor combat aircraft by the Russian Su-35S fighter jet.

DnxQFfQXgAAe7LH-min-1-873x570.jpg


Photographs, made by the infrared search and track fire control system of the Russian Su-35S, shows in infrared spectrum an F-22 Raptor fighter jet flying over Syria.




The Su-35S infrared search and track system called the OLS-35 and includes an infrared sensor, laser rangefinder, target designator and television camera. This system to determine the general position of aircraft within a fifty-kilometer radius—potentially quite useful for detecting stealth aircraft, such as F-22, at shorter ranges.

The systems scans the airspace ahead of the jet for heat signatures caused by aircraft engines and/or plane’s surface friction caused by the aircraft flying through the air.

According to the Deagel.com, OLS-35 comprises a heat-seeker, a laser rangefinder/designator with new algorithms and advanced software to outperform its predecessor installed on the Su-27/Su-30 aircraft family. The Su-35 IRST is superior to the OEPS-27 in terms of range, precision and reliability.
EXCEPTION WILL HAPPENS, EVEN F-16/EF-2000 DETECT TRACK F-22 IN TRAINING MISSION @Frostbite :p::P;):enjoy:
 
You guys think the F-22 flies alone? Assuming this is credible, you better believe it that the Russian was in someone else's target cross.

And that someone else would have been in the S-400's target cross.

It's a vicious cycle.
 
When a Russian plane downs an American plane, only then I will believe it. So far, it has been Russians which are on receiving end when it comes to air combat.
 

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