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yes and sanctions free option.Sri lanka, Libya, Afghanistan , N Korea (?), and many more don't loose your hope guys
Keen?? People are dying for a limited air war here. Every one dreams of MiGs and Sukhois shooting down Junk fighters.You dont know how KEEN we are for that
This aircraft is too over hyped !! its slow and sluggish even the angle of attack are restricted due to it can only withstand
8Gs of pull.
But then again if you are playing a political poker, the only thing you can do is to keep betting !!
Yea, i know how you feel. People are are very stupid to pick up on the subtle hints, and the fagggots who get elected are plain cowards to do the right thing.yes we know, but only deep inside you heart...short of sending "Attack US" greeting card, we have done everything in our power.
Untrue, High Gs are constantly reached when fights just start with the planes entering the knife fight. A good pilot can hold 9 to 10 Gs for just a couple of seconds, and it is this couple of seconds which wins him the crucial few degrees of turn higher than his opponent which wins him the fight. Because in the age of High G and High off bore sight missiles, closing the initial 180 degree gap between the 2 planes and launching the missiles means much more than pulling a few Gs and keeping in Air Speed to fully get behind the opponent.Pretty much all the planes are in the 8 G range----nobody goes over 8 G's---the only time that you might do it is if you are doing stunt flying at a much much slower speeds----.
Pappy---when you are doing 500---600 knots---you just cannot pull 8 + G's like that----. You pull high G's during dog fights that are between 300 to 400 knots---and with the current missiles----you need better jammers than higher G's.
1# China
2# Myanmar
3# Azerbaijan
4# Zimbabwe
5# Turkey
6# Serbia
7# Egypt
8# Saudi Arabia
9# Sri Lanka
10# Nigeria
Did I miss anyone? Now that's a long list of failures. These deals were either "in the final stages of the deal" or were "genuinely interested" or fight trials took place in the countries and lost the tender, and some in the list hilariously claimed that the deal was signed.
Now an even longer list of countries who were "interested" in the JF-17.
Indonesia
Bangladesh
Syria
Bolivia
Ethiopia
Morocco
Venezuela
Iran
Lebanon
Albania
Malaysia
North Korea
Sudan
Congo
#Argentina
Tanzania
Thailand
Eritrea
So much for selling like "hot cakes" which was predicted in 2003 by the PAF airchief Saadat(IIRC).
.
11Gs? I'd like some sources please. That its been cleared for 11Gs on Operational Mission, and not some ground test.
11Gs? I'd like some sources please. That its been cleared for 11Gs on Operational Mission, and not some ground test.
11Gs? I'd like some sources please. That its been cleared for 11Gs on Operational Mission, and not some ground test.
You realize majority of the 4th gen platforms have the ability to go 11G's? USAF F-16 pilots routinely test fly and go around 9.5 - 10 's (for fun, not instructed to do so for any missions). The G limit is really due to the limitations of the human body. Not because the airframe can't take 10 or 11 g's.
Did you know that a 747 can go super sonic? and can also do limited rolls sub sonic? BUT....after a few attempts, good luck flying it as you'd have compromised the structural integrity of the plane. Similarly, in fighter jets (4th gen or above), you'd put pilot's brain /body integrity at risk if you tried 11G's. But the aircraft itself is capable of doing it.
In 1985, an F-15 was tested to go beyond 30 G's, the airframe was so bent and the wing skin was wrinkled up badly (that's all metal and composites). So ability is one thing, flying at safe, optimal performance is a whole different issue, and that's what's instructed in flight schools.
Plus, every mission and fuel / weapons' configuration has its own G recommended limits so pilots have to see their manuals pre-flight to understand mission configuration for optimal and safe flight maneuvers.