Fourth-generation jet fighter is a general classification of
jet fighters in service from approximately 1980 to the present, and represent design concepts of the 1970s. Fourth-
generation designs are heavily influenced by lessons learned from the previous generation of combat aircraft. Long-range
air-to-air missiles, originally thought to make
dogfighting obsolete, proved less influential than expected, precipitating a renewed emphasis on maneuverability. Meanwhile, the growing costs of military aircraft in general and the demonstrated success of aircraft such as the
F-4 Phantom II gave rise to the popularity of
Multirole combat aircraft in parallel with the advances marking the so-called fourth generation.
During the period in question, maneuverability was enhanced by
relaxed static stability, made possible by introduction of the
fly-by-wire (FBW)
flight control system (FLCS), which in turn was possible due to advances in digital computers and system integration techniques. Analog avionics, required to enable FBW operations, became a fundamental requirement and began to be replaced by digital flight control systems in the latter half of the 1980s.
[1]
The further advance of microcomputers in the 1980s and 1990s permitted rapid upgrades to the
avionics over the lifetimes of these fighters, incorporating system upgrades such as
active electronically scanned array (AESA), digital avionics buses and
Infra-red search and track (IRST).
Due to the dramatic enhancement of capabilities in these upgraded fighters and in new designs of the 1990s that reflected these new capabilities, the US Government has taken to using the designation
4.5 generation to refer to these later designs. This is intended to reflect a class of fighters that are evolutionary upgrades of the 4th generation incorporating integrated avionics suites, advanced weapons efforts to make the (mostly) conventionally designed aircraft nonetheless less easily detectable, and trackable as a response to advancing missile and
radar technology (see
stealth technology).
[2][3] Inherent airframe design features exist, and include masking of turbine-blades and application of advanced sometimes
radar-absorbent materials, but not the distinctive low-observable configurations of the latest aircraft, referred to as
fifth-generation fighters or aircraft such as the
F-22 Raptor and the
F-35 Lightning II.