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China nears approval of $16 billion domestic jet-engine plan: Xinhua

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Taihang Turbofan 太行涡扇
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九寨 涡扇发动机 Jiuzhai Turbofan

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长江 1000A Chang Jiang 1000A

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岷山发动机 Minshan

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$16 billion???thats big..gr8.more r n d = more technology
 
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Why hasn't this been approved yet? It's been months since this report came out. This project should have been approved immediately! I'm disgusted with this delay. Military has been neglected by the western loving CCP members. They immediately approve any project for western multinationals but takes months to approve projects for our military. Sick of this BS.
 
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They better do.
Because engine development is a very cumbersome and time consuming thing to do. The early you start, the better.
They have the potential, workforce and moolah to do this, so why wait?
Congrats to chinese friends in the forum. :cheers:
 
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I thought all the J11's, J10's and the J 20's were flying with WS10 - WS15's as has been claimed by Chinese forumers

China is determined to reduce its dependency on foreign companies like Boeing Co (BA), EADS-owned Airbus (EAD.PA), General Electric Co (GE) and Rolls Royce Plc (RR.TO) for the country's soaring demand for planes and engines.
So far the domestic aerospace industry has failed to build a reliable, high-performance jet engine to end its dependence on Russian and Western makers for equipping its military and commercial aircraft.

Where's Hongwu and his fleet of J10's in Tibet ready to rain megaton nukes on New Delhi??
 
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While we are moving into developing more advanced engines, Indians have abandoned the Kaveri engine :lol:

India has not abandoned engine development. They are doing joint ventures, which had proven being successful for them like Brahmos and MKI.
 
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I thought all the J11's, J10's and the J 20's were flying with WS10 - WS15's as has been claimed by Chinese forumers

I suppose all the aircraft pictured below are being powered by Russian engines? :lol:

J-10B

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J-11B

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J-20

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Where's Hongwu and his fleet of J10's in Tibet ready to rain megaton nukes on New Delhi??

Couldn't we just use the DF-25?:lol:

February 11, 2013, 7:10 p.m. ET

Obama's Nuclear Fantasy

The president is setting the stage for a world with more nukes in the wrong hands.

As a young Soviet military officer, Viktor Esin was stationed in Cuba during the October 1962 crisis, where he had release authority over a nuclear-tipped missile targeting New York. On his first visit to Manhattan in December, I made sure to thank him for not obliterating our city.

Gen. Esin rose to become chief of staff for the Strategic Rocket Forces, and he is now a professor at the Russian Academy of Military Science. So what's been on his mind lately? Mainly the stealthy rise of China to a position of nuclear parity with the U.S. and Russia. "All in all, they may have 850 warheads ready to launch," he says. "Other warheads are kept in storage and intended to be employed in an emergency." He estimates the total size of the Chinese arsenal at between 1,600 and 1,800 warheads.

That is something to bear in mind as the Obama administration seeks to slash the U.S. arsenal to about 1,000 strategic warheads. That would be well below the ceiling of 1,550 warheads stipulated by the 2010 New Start Treaty. The administration also wants to spend less than the $80 billion it promised on modernizing America's rusting nuclear-weapons infrastructure.

On the strength of that promise 13 Republican senators gave President Obama the votes he needed to ratify New Start. Suckers! Now the president means to dispense with the Senate altogether, either by imposing the cuts unilaterally or by means of an informal agreement with Vladimir Putin. This is what Mr. Obama meant in telling Dmitry Medvedev last year that he would have "more flexibility" after re-election.

But what, you ask, is so frightening about having "only" 1,000 nuclear weapons? Surely that is more than enough to turn any conceivable adversary Paleolithic. Won't we remain more or less at parity with the Russians, and far ahead of everyone else?

It all depends on China. It is an article of faith among the arms-control community that Beijing subscribes to a theory of "minimum means of reprisal" and has long kept its arsenal more or less flat in the range of 240-400 warheads. Yet that is a speculative, dated and unverified figure, and China has spent the last decade embarked on a massive military buildup. Isn't it just possible that Beijing has been building up its nuclear forces, too?

When I broached this theory in an October 2011 column—noting that the U.S. had, in fact, underestimated the size of the Soviet arsenal by a factor of two at the end of the Cold War—I was attacked for being needlessly alarmist. But one man who shares that alarm is Gen. Esin. In July 2012, he notes, the Chinese tested an intermediate-range DF-25 missile, which Russia carefully tracked.

"In the final stage the missile had three shifts in trajectory, dropping one [warhead] at each shift," he notes. "It's solid evidence of a MIRV [multiple warhead] test."
A month later, the Chinese launched a new long-range, MIRV-capable missile, this time from a submarine.

The general runs through additional evidence of China's nuclear strides. But what should really get the attention of U.S. military planners are his observations of how Russia might react. "If China doesn't stop, Russia will consider abandoning the INF Treaty," he warns. "Russia cannot afford not taking this factor into account."

Stephens: Obama's Nuclear Fantasy - WSJ.com
 
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