What's new

Rafales or No Rafales– Chinese Designer Explains Why Stealth, 5th Gen J-20 Jet Beats Everyone Around

Zarvan

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 28, 2011
Messages
54,470
Reaction score
87
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
SEARCH

EurAsian Times: Latest Asian, Middle-East, EurAsian, Indian News

ASIA PACIFIC
Rafales or No Rafales – Chinese Designer Explains Why Stealth, 5th Gen J-20 Jet Beats Everyone Around
The Indian Air Force will soon be equipped with state-of-art Rafale Fighter Jets which will be stationed at Hasimara Air Base while China already has 5th generation Chengdu J-20 jets. Chinese experts claim that J-20s are ahead of everyone in competition including much-hyped Rafale jets.




EurAsian Times Desk

The Chief Designer of Chinese stealth, fifth-generation J-20 jets, Yang Wei, has explained the vast, unmatched capabilities of J-20 aircraft. The J-20 has been described as a revolutionary, cognition-subverting next-generation fighter jet, characterized by long-range, high capabilities in penetration, awareness, firepower, and fast decision-making.


Yang published a paper in Acta Aeronautica et Astronautica Sinica, a Chinese monthly journal on aeronautics describing the capabilities of the Chinese J-20 fighter jet. Experts observing the China-India conflict have been discussing the prowess of both air forces with many drawing comparisons between J-20 and highly anticipated – Rafale jets.


As reported by EurAsian Times earlier, five Rafale jets are en route to India from France. The jets will stop in the United Arab Emirates before arriving at Ambala Air Force station. New Delhi aims to gain air superiority over China with the addition of French Rafales.


In the paper, Yang said that in older generations of fighter jets, manoeuvrability used to be the deciding factor, but this concept is becoming outdated with the development of advanced medium-range air-to-air missiles with their beyond-visual-range attack capabilities.

Yang believes that information has now become the deciding factor, as modern fighter jets focus on gaining more information with the help of active electronically scanned array (AESA) radars and data chains, while also reducing opponents’ ability to gain information, including using stealth technology and electronic countermeasures.


In Yang’s opinion, when aircraft can get more information with these advanced devices, pilots must have extensive knowledge, sharp analysis, and sound decision-making to put them to use. Yang said artificial intelligence will help pilots process the information, and help them become mission objective-oriented.

china-jets-india-300x133.png

Chinese jets in action

The author adds that at each step in the original observe-orient-decide-act (OODA) loop in the air combat decision-making process will feature artificial intelligence’s assistance. “Intelligence becoming the deciding factor” will be the essence of what Yang calls an OODA 3.0.

Citing foreign projects, Yang said that a future fighter jet will generally require a longer combat range, longer endurance, stronger stealth capability, a larger load of air-to-air and air-to-surface weapons, and the functionality to provide its pilot with easy-to-understand battlefield situation images and predictions.


According to Yang, in an integrated system, the aircraft should be able to form a network, draw real-time integrated situational images, create multiple attack routes, and transmit target information across mission areas in real-time.

Yang’s vision could indicate what China’s future fighter jet might be like, a Chinese military expert told the Global Times on Monday under the condition of anonymity.


As reported by EurAsian Times, China is close to developing indigenous engines for its J-20B fighter jet. China wants to reduce its dependency on foreign-made engines and once it masters the art of powering jets via indigenous engines, it will be able to develop and produce the next generation of fighter jets.

China is eyeing to develop a next-generation fighter jet by 2035 or earlier, which could feature laser, adaptive engines and the ability to command unmanned drones.

https://eurasiantimes.com/rafales-o...ealth-5th-gen-j-20-jet-beats-everyone-around/
 
J-20 is for use against assets like AWACS and tankers, not meant for combating other fighters. If you can take out assets your 4th gen fighters can take out their af utilizing your own assets.
 
Windy bhai kuch captions b daal diya kren taakay meri tarah nalaik bandhay b kuch samajh sakay.. or they Rafale electronic mark on radars? aur ground radars or some aircraft radars?
That is the Galactic Rafale captured squarely in the gunsights/HUD of EF Typhoon.....allegedly French were desperate to keep this under lid.
 
J-20 is for use against assets like AWACS and tankers, not meant for combating other fighters. If you can take out assets your 4th gen fighters can take out their af utilizing your own assets.
The same elements that would give J-20 the ability to be used against larger platforms apply to fighter sized aircraft. Undetected approach, getting the adversary in a favorable weapons engagement zone and employing very long range AAMs is what the J-20 promises.
 
Last edited:
The same elements that would give J-20 the ability to be used against larger platforms applies to fighter sized aircraft. Undetected approach, getting the adversary in a favorable weapons engagement zone and employing very long range AAMs is what the J-20 promises.
Well yes, but less efficient.
 
That is how China intends to use it against USA in Pacific, without assets combat ability goes down severely.

That is debatable too. What empirical data do we have to make this assertion?
Dude, 4th gen fighters are enough to take down Indian airforce without assets. It is hard for a non stealth aircraft to just sneak up to aerial assets.
 
Back
Top Bottom