for Chinese PLAAF pilots,
as they heard that on December 25th at the CAC factory in Chengdu, Sichuan, the first production
J-20, "2101", was put through taxiing tests on the factory runway, this seems to signify the move away from
prototype production to building fighters for actual military use, "2101" will soon have a coat of radar-absorbent material (RAM)
applied over its yellow primer, "2101" is the ninth J-20 fighter built
by the CAC in under five years (the first J-20 prototype flew in January 2011) the
J-20 will give the PLAAF a technological advantage over every other Asian air
force, while the J-20 may not be able to supercruise (fly at supersonic speeds
without using fuel-thirsty afterburners) with its current Russian AL-31
turbofan engines, its high level of stealth, long range and electronic warfare
capabilities will make it a very formidable foe for other fighters, the J-20
also carries a powerful active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar,
nose-mounted infrared search and tracking sensors, and fuselage-mounted cameras
to give its pilot a VR 360 degree imaging (similar to the F-35's avionics),
for
weapons, the J-20 would have long-range missiles like the PL-12, PL-15, and
PL-21, and short-ranged infrared-guided PL-8 and PL-10, networked with other
platforms such as the Divine Eagle anti-stealth drone, the J-20's array of
sensors will give it the ability to go toe-to-toe with other stealth fighters,
it appears that future J-20's will likely have super-cruise capable Chinese
WS-15 turbofan engines and improved gallium nitride AESA radars, with further
out options including pilot controlled UAVs, as J-20 testing wraps up, the
PLAAF will also have many other new projects to roll out, like the J-31 stealth
fighter, H-20 stealth bomber, Sharp Sword stealth UAV and hypersonic weaponry, as I have mentioned before lets wish that none of all of this will ever be used in anger.
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