Looks to be a rear view of the 2nd J-36 prototype. Posted by @chaoyinsukandao on Twitter.
View attachment 165106
This can't be 36011 because when this is flying 36011 was in XinjiangOh, let‘s summarise since I‘m confused:
- we have a chart image of the first prototype clearly with no. 36011
- we have several images of a 2nd aircraft and the amount of changes suggest it is a different aircraft
- now we have a „clearer“ image of the same one suggesting it is likely also no. 36011 (@huitong)
Why? Just to confuse us there are two nos. 36011? Or was the first 36011 heavily modified to be now the second 36011 (IMO unlikely)
Any other theories & explanations?
This can't be 36011 because when this is flying 36011 was in Xinjiang
Buried exhaust for jh-36 and 2dtvc for j-36. Yeah I'm trolling.All I hope is that they keep the DSI with the buried exhaust or they have a buried Exhaust
And 2dtvc variant
Original J-36 is in Xinjiang for flight tests, so presumably they are still running tests on it or why would they ship it all the way out thereBuried exhaust for jh-36 and 2dtvc for j-36. Yeah I'm trolling.
Would be interesting to know if the one with buried exhaust still fly ? We just seing some picture of the modified for quite a while.
Can it be a modified first prototype with some switchable parts for testing ? Landing gear is harder to switch bu I wonder with the short time between the two iterations.
The first 2 digits are undiscernible, but the last three I'd say are fairly clearly "011". The last digit especially is definitely "1" in the same font as the first prototype's bort number.Am I trippin' or does this also look like 36011?
Edit: the more i squint , the more it looks like 34011. J-34 anyone?
View attachment 165097
Apart from trolling enthusiasts and foreign intelligence, what would be the purpose of having two different airframes with the same bort number? The latter probably has enough intelligence from elsewhere to not be fooled by such a basic deception anyway. CAC could have just done the same as SAC and not given their next-gen prototype airframes a bort number.It's possible the correct answer is incredibly silly: Chengdu Aircraft manufactured two completely different J-36 prototypes, both designated as 36011.