MastanKhan
PDF VETERAN
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I never asked a question.
Hi,
Ok---it was a statement seeking an answer---or input.
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I never asked a question.
Yes, though J-10 is lacking in it's A-G role vs it's contemporaries. Hopefully it will get there as PAF can't afford to have niche role fighters.PAF prefers to acquire MRFs
Any comparison of J-10 done with JF-17 and F-16C regarding range ?Yes, though J-10 is lacking in it's A-G role vs it's contemporaries. Hopefully it will get there as PAF can't afford to have niche role fighters.
How so?Yes, though J-10 is lacking in it's A-G role vs it's contemporaries.
I did not mean to suggest that it cannot be used in that role. I think PAF see the J-10 as multi/omni role platform.Disappointing. This would mean JFT's A2G arsenal has to grow.
I think we should assume the following:Under Indian maintenence...yes sure it can
Perhaps.Assume that Indians live on the moon as well
No need reality is evidentPerhaps.
I think it would be best to not underestimate.
I agree. I think, in its initial years, the PAF will primarily use the J-10CE in the air-to-air role. One major point of this purchase was to plugin the gap left by the lack of F-16s (the US isn't letting us get used A/Bs nor is it helping us co-finance the new Vs). When engaging India, our F-16s are primarily an A2A asset. So, for the short-term, the J-10CEs are meant to shore up our ability to thwart the Rafale threat in A2A.I did not mean to suggest that it cannot be used in that role. I think PAF see the J-10 as multi/omni role platform.
My point is that the primary purpose of the J-10 is to provide persistence in the air for our offensive fleet/strike packages. By persistence, I mean greater loiter times, less IFR meet ups with the tankers in hot situations, more missiles (both BVR and WVR) and a massive AESA to see much further out beyond the capabilities of JF-17. The simple calculation for the JF-17s was that their air to air loadout is at a disadvantage in the face of Indian Rafale induction. Trying to put 2 PL-15s would impact the performance of the JF-17 significantly along with a couple of WVR AAMs. This is where J-10 provides the advantage. It has more range, can carry more offensive standoff missiles and would allow JF-17s to be used in the same way the USAF uses the F-15 and F-16 combination. The former to use its large load carrying capacity with BVR missiles to whittle down adversarial aircraft numbers and allowing the F-16s more freedom of action.
In reality, the J-10 could even do the same for our F-16 fleet since its reach with AIM-120C would also be somewhat limited compared to PL-15s.
For surface attack/air to ground missions, J-10 is definitely an option, however we have F-16s with better targeting pods and also the growing armed UCAV fleet.
New Recruit
I agree. I think, in its initial years, the PAF will primarily use the J-10CE in the air-to-air role. One major point of this purchase was to plugin the gap left by the lack of F-16s (the US isn't letting us get used A/Bs nor is it helping us co-finance the new Vs). When engaging India, our F-16s are primarily an A2A asset. So, for the short-term, the J-10CEs are meant to shore up our ability to thwart the Rafale threat in A2A.
Likewise, the PAF is clearly tuning the JF-17 for the A2G/S role. Already, the 'old' Block-I is capable of deploying the C-802A AShM, for example. Likewise, the Block-IIs can support the C-802A AShM as well as the IREK PGB and LD-10 ARM. The next phase is integrating the Ra'ad-I/II, REK-III (a rocket-assisted glide-bomb similar to the H-4), and possibly even SMASH or HD-1A supersonic-cruising AShM to the JF-17 Block-III and JF-17B. Funds permitting, the PAF can do some crazier stuff with the JF-17s, like fitting the Block-Is with the GB6 to give it a JSOW-type capability (a stand-off range bomblet dispenser for anti-armour ops), YJ-9E air-to-ground missiles, etc.
That said, the PAF wouldn't invest in a net-new fighter asset without committing to at least 90 units for the long run. Be it the Mirage III/5, F-16, or even JF-17, the PAF has always set a minimum 90-unit requirement for any new major fighter asset. I think we can realistically expect the J-10CE fleet to grow to over 90 units through the rest of this decade (the PAF can order in incremental batches). So, we might see some J-10CEs become available for the A2G/S role.
OTOH, I'm still not sure how much-added utility you'd get from an A2G-configured J-10CE versus the JF-17. Sure, there's a difference, but it isn't as game-changing as getting that big twin-engine asset like the F-15 or Su-30. Even the PLAAF is primarily leaning on those larger designs for the strike role. So, yes, a JF-17 carrying 2 big SOWs or 4 small SOWs isn't ideal, but it gets the job done in our current environment (India is literally "right there"). Not only that, but the PAF can field JF-17s in ample numbers so that it has more strike-capable jets on hand, and can source them relatively more affordably.
Overall, the PAF isn't going to get its 'ideal' strike platform until the NGFA comes online. Be it the Turkish TFX or Chinese J-35/21, the PAF itself said it wants a twin-engine fighter as its NGFA. I think the PAF set the twin-engine need because it wanted a "proper" strike-capable and maritime-capable design. So, from the 2030s, the PAF's "offensive edge" will be a combination of the J-10CE (in the A2A role) and the NGFA (in the A2G/S role).
I'm not sure there's a full upgrade track to Block-II. The Block-I may have gotten some of the Block-II's subsystems, but overall, each JF-17 block is structurally different.Newbie question :
How many jf17's (block I) are still in their orignal configuration, Weren't they all upgraded to Block II spec?
Hi,I agree. I think, in its initial years, the PAF will primarily use the J-10CE in the air-to-air role. One major point of this purchase was to plugin the gap left by the lack of F-16s (the US isn't letting us get used A/Bs nor is it helping us co-finance the new Vs). When engaging India, our F-16s are primarily an A2A asset. So, for the short-term, the J-10CEs are meant to shore up our ability to thwart the Rafale threat in A2A.
Likewise, the PAF is clearly tuning the JF-17 for the A2G/S role. Already, the 'old' Block-I is capable of deploying the C-802A AShM, for example. Likewise, the Block-IIs can support the C-802A AShM as well as the IREK PGB and LD-10 ARM. The next phase is integrating the Ra'ad-I/II, REK-III (a rocket-assisted glide-bomb similar to the H-4), and possibly even SMASH or HD-1A supersonic-cruising AShM to the JF-17 Block-III and JF-17B. Funds permitting, the PAF can do some crazier stuff with the JF-17s, like fitting the Block-Is with the GB6 to give it a JSOW-type capability (a stand-off range bomblet dispenser for anti-armour ops), YJ-9E air-to-ground missiles, etc.
That said, the PAF wouldn't invest in a net-new fighter asset without committing to at least 90 units for the long run. Be it the Mirage III/5, F-16, or even JF-17, the PAF has always set a minimum 90-unit requirement for any new major fighter asset. I think we can realistically expect the J-10CE fleet to grow to over 90 units through the rest of this decade (the PAF can order in incremental batches). So, we might see some J-10CEs become available for the A2G/S role.
OTOH, I'm still not sure how much-added utility you'd get from an A2G-configured J-10CE versus the JF-17. Sure, there's a difference, but it isn't as game-changing as getting that big twin-engine asset like the F-15 or Su-30. Even the PLAAF is primarily leaning on those larger designs for the strike role. So, yes, a JF-17 carrying 2 big SOWs or 4 small SOWs isn't ideal, but it gets the job done in our current environment (India is literally "right there"). Not only that, but the PAF can field JF-17s in ample numbers so that it has more strike-capable jets on hand, and can source them relatively more affordably.
Overall, the PAF isn't going to get its 'ideal' strike platform until the NGFA comes online. Be it the Turkish TFX or Chinese J-35/21, the PAF itself said it wants a twin-engine fighter as its NGFA. I think the PAF set the twin-engine need because it wanted a "proper" strike-capable and maritime-capable design. So, from the 2030s, the PAF's "offensive edge" will be a combination of the J-10CE (in the A2A role) and the NGFA (in the A2G/S role).