ahsanraza81
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WOW...THATS A GREAT NEWS > GO AHEAD CHINA...YAY
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Does anyone have any information on just how many J-15s are to be carried on Varag? I think 30-36 would be a good number.
So do you.
Wrong. This has to do with the technical definition of 'guidance'.
But not in the 'zig-zag' multiple maneuvers perception. The descent velocity does not allow the warhead that much time. At best, one course correction.
Wrong...See above.
Yeah it's pretty much a case of source or it didn't happen.
A training carrier, to be exact.
China's bulk of carriers will consist of two Type 089 conventional carriers and two Type 085 nuclear carriers.
The AC model in the Jiangnan shipyard, it looks very Nimitz-ish.
China gave Turkey $80 million for crossing rights for Varyag????
Really? But keep this in mind, because it will bite you...It seems you haven't been keeping up in economic news for the past 40 years.
Yours.And his technical definition of "guidance" is incorrect.
Really? Any credible third party source for that? There are more serious complexities involved but providing a source for your claim will suffice for now.Descent from midcourse altitude to ground is about 30 seconds for an intercontinental ballistic missile. That gives the warhead some time to do a few maneuvers.
It seems you haven't been keeping up in economic news for the past 40 years......And advances in interception laws. News for you, kid, what you just said also applies to the warhead, especially when a moving target, like a ship, is involved. You are treading into an area -- guidance, navigation, and control laws -- you know nothing about.Even if it's only one maneuver, modern anti ballistic missile systems use one precalculated intercept point and can not "predict" a warhead's trajectory change.
I read your previous posts and I fail to see how they are relevant to MaRVs and ABMs' abilities to intercept them.
Varyag was first offered to the Russian Federation after the collapse of USSR, but Russia had back down instead because of its economic crisis occurred in the 1990s.