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PLAAF J-10A crashed, pilot died

I searched the news but found that a pilot return to fly his new bird 50 days later after a crash accident. And the date is 9th, Nov, 2015. And the news is said that happened in 9th,Nov.

Also, I find the news comes from HK news agency - singtao and the credibility of their news related to military is suspect.

This is mostly a fabricated news.
20151117082121080339255.jpg
 
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I searched the news but found that a pilot return to fly his new bird 50 days later after a crash accident. And the date is 9th, Nov, 2015. And the news is said that happened in 9th,Nov.
20151117082121080339255.jpg

This pilot was mentioned before in 12 Oct 2015. His name is Li Tong. He's alive after the crash in night flight in Shenyang Military Zone ( mentioned that the firmed news come up 21 days after the date of the crash - on 19 Sep 2015 )
歼10坠毁飞行员跳伞后步行半小时 借电话自救|歼10飞行员|歼10坠毁_新浪新闻
A J-10 fighter from the PLA's Shenyang Military Region crashed during a training flight on Oct. 12 with the pilot delaying his bailout in an attempt to ensure he did not let his plane go down in an urban area, according to China's state broadcaster CCTV.
The pilot, Li Tong, is the chief of staff of an undisclosed fighter regiment of the Shenyang Military Region.

Is this the same case? I think No. The same is the date - 19. ( one is 19 Sep, and another is 19 Nov. 2015, exact two months later )

The location, the name of pilot are totally different.
They are separated news.

This time the pilot name is Lu Yaogui, belong to Zhejiang region.

A PLAAF J-10A crashed on Nov. 19 in Anji County of Zhejiang Province, China. The pilot, Lu Yaogui, ejected but later died from injuries.This is the second J-10A crash this year.

Shenyang Military Zone has nothing to do in Zhejiang province which is Nanjing military Zone
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450px-Nanjing_Military_Region.svg.png
 
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Who told you that pilot is died?

The crash in 19 Sep 2015 only surfaced in 12 Oct 2015 while the pilot is alive.
The crash with death of pilot ( if any ) is very serious and will takes some times to surface, maybe next month?

We don't wish the bad thing happen to the pilot. It's not good for his family.
 
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When a Chinese-designed jet fighter crashed, local media found fault with the imported Russian engine while praising the injured pilot for his “outstanding soldier’s conviction” during the incident.
According to a report by the Beijing-based Sina Military Network, the Russian-built engine used in the J-10 is prone to malfunction, having caused multiple crashes in recent years.
On Sept. 19. a J-10 fighter jet from northeastern China’s Shenyang Military Region crashed during a nighttime patrol mission, state-run China Central Television (CCTV) reported. The Russian-built engine had lost power at over 11,000 feet, said pilot Li Tong, who ejected at 1,000 feet following an abortive 198-second attempt to glide the aircraft to a local airfield.
Li survived with neck and spine injuries. Because he had avoided lit, populated areas when maneuvering his damaged plane, CCTV lauded him as a hero, saying that he had made no less than five “weighty decisions” to “avoid the loss of property and life among the masses.”
A distinguished military pilot, Li Tong told CCTV that his first priority was to save the jet, which at the time of engine failure was carrying 200 rounds of aircraft ordnance and 2.5 tons of fuel. As Li struggled to restart the engine, the plane fell to about 5,000 feet.
Why a Russian Engine?
The J-10 is a single-engine light fighter aircraft that was developed by the Chengdu Aircraft Corporation in the 1990s and put into service starting 2005. It is built around the powerful Russian AL-31 engine, which was originally intended for the two-engined Su-27 family of Soviet-designed fighter aircraft.
With its Western-inspired and locally-designed single-engine configuration, however, the J-10 suffers from severe compatibility issues in using the AL-31. At the same time, the Chinese-designed WS-10 aircraft engines have proven even less reliable than the Russian equipment.
Despite claims made in 2014 by a spokesman for the Chinese research institute tasked with the WS-10’s development that the engine was “fully operational and matured” for use in an upgraded J-10, a Sina report this August revealed that the Chinese aviation industry had yet to reduce the Taihang’s failure rate to within acceptable boundaries. The Chinese air force and in particular the J-10 jets will continue to run Russian engines.
According to Chinese naval publications cited by Sina, consultations with Russian providers to find a solution for the AL-31 compatibility issues have been delayed for want of funding.
“Measures to address failures from the perspective of design theory cannot be given,” the Sina report thus said.
Netizens found issue with the Chinese media reports and analysis of the September crash, saying that CCTV’s triumphant depiction of the pilot’s emergency actions drew attention away from the technical failings common to modern Chinese fighters.
A user in Guangdong Province contradicted the Sina analysis for its implication that the engine can simply be re-engineered, if only the Russians would help. “The engine is not like a graphics card that can be changed at will,” the post reads. “It is integrated with the entire airframe.”
“What if the aircraft was severely damaged, or if the pilot had no time to process the malfunction? Never make a trifle of human life,” a netizen from Shanghai said, criticizing the CCTV report for its rosy depiction of Li Tong’s flight and crash that “avoided residential areas

Defence News, India spends more on defence infra, less on men & maintenance: Study
 
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When a Chinese-designed jet fighter crashed, local media found fault with the imported Russian engine while praising the injured pilot for his “outstanding soldier’s conviction” during the incident.
According to a report by the Beijing-based Sina Military Network, the Russian-built engine used in the J-10 is prone to malfunction, having caused multiple crashes in recent years.
On Sept. 19. a J-10 fighter jet from northeastern China’s Shenyang Military Region crashed during a nighttime patrol mission, state-run China Central Television (CCTV) reported. The Russian-built engine had lost power at over 11,000 feet, said pilot Li Tong, who ejected at 1,000 feet following an abortive 198-second attempt to glide the aircraft to a local airfield.
Li survived with neck and spine injuries. Because he had avoided lit, populated areas when maneuvering his damaged plane, CCTV lauded him as a hero, saying that he had made no less than five “weighty decisions” to “avoid the loss of property and life among the masses.”
A distinguished military pilot, Li Tong told CCTV that his first priority was to save the jet, which at the time of engine failure was carrying 200 rounds of aircraft ordnance and 2.5 tons of fuel. As Li struggled to restart the engine, the plane fell to about 5,000 feet.
Why a Russian Engine?
The J-10 is a single-engine light fighter aircraft that was developed by the Chengdu Aircraft Corporation in the 1990s and put into service starting 2005. It is built around the powerful Russian AL-31 engine, which was originally intended for the two-engined Su-27 family of Soviet-designed fighter aircraft.
With its Western-inspired and locally-designed single-engine configuration, however, the J-10 suffers from severe compatibility issues in using the AL-31. At the same time, the Chinese-designed WS-10 aircraft engines have proven even less reliable than the Russian equipment.
Despite claims made in 2014 by a spokesman for the Chinese research institute tasked with the WS-10’s development that the engine was “fully operational and matured” for use in an upgraded J-10, a Sina report this August revealed that the Chinese aviation industry had yet to reduce the Taihang’s failure rate to within acceptable boundaries. The Chinese air force and in particular the J-10 jets will continue to run Russian engines.
According to Chinese naval publications cited by Sina, consultations with Russian providers to find a solution for the AL-31 compatibility issues have been delayed for want of funding.
“Measures to address failures from the perspective of design theory cannot be given,” the Sina report thus said.
Netizens found issue with the Chinese media reports and analysis of the September crash, saying that CCTV’s triumphant depiction of the pilot’s emergency actions drew attention away from the technical failings common to modern Chinese fighters.
A user in Guangdong Province contradicted the Sina analysis for its implication that the engine can simply be re-engineered, if only the Russians would help. “The engine is not like a graphics card that can be changed at will,” the post reads. “It is integrated with the entire airframe.”
“What if the aircraft was severely damaged, or if the pilot had no time to process the malfunction? Never make a trifle of human life,” a netizen from Shanghai said, criticizing the CCTV report for its rosy depiction of Li Tong’s flight and crash that “avoided residential areas

As per forum rules, you are required to provide a link to the OP.

Thank You
 
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The J-10 is not a joint venture between Pakistan and China. Pakistan planned to buy 36 J-10s but there is no final deal signed yet. Pakistan may very well opt for Su-35 instead of J-10. The link mentions crash of J-10A which is older version since China is testing version C. Total bullshit South Asian journalism.
 
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Well this Indian Defence news writer has some serious mental disorders..Everyone can see his hatred towards Pakistan on his page and now he includes PAK too in J-10 Crash...!
on-topic: Crashes happens but no one can beat IAF as their jet have successfully landed on motorcycle too :lol::lol:
 
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Hahahaha Chutiyapa is Adding Pak in the Tittle .....

Oh Bhai J-10 China ka Hai Pak ka ni or JV bhi ni hai... Abhi tk to deal bhi sign ni hui ... Planed 36 but it's just a plan...

Wese to Su-30 MKI bhi Crash hoty hain... in recent 3 month 7 IAF k jets crashed to since 2007 86 Indian Jaguars Crashed

Indian Air Force faces major challenge after losing 7 aircrafts to accidents in 3 months - IBNLive

Indian Air Force lost 30 fighter aircraft, 10 choppers in three years

Indian Air Force: Jaguar Aircraft Crash 86th Since 2007; One IAF Aircraft Lost Nearly Every Other Month
 
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