So all you're saying is generically that the 056 has a combat data system, like every other warship in existence. In which case your statement lacks all relevance to the discussion.
Yes, these ships have a combat data system, very likely to share libraries with the CMS of larger ships.
No, you have no evidence that ATECS doesn't have long range air defense capability. What you are doing is presuming that it doesn't on the basis that current ATECS ships use ESSM rather than SM-2. In fact the best that you can achieve is to say that you have no idea what ATECS full capability is, which is unambiguously a fact.
It does not matter. The ships currently do not have long range air defense capability. Unless they are equipped with SM-2 now, which they aren't.
Nah. If a steel mast disrupts the function of a radar, then the obvious solution is an aluminum mast. And given the location of the mast directly behind
Aluminum mast is flammable. One reason why the US went with all steel for the Burke. If the Japanese are following the US example, they would also be using steel.
the rotating radars, I would make aluminum the default assumption rather than steel. Also, even if the EW system interfered with the radar, which you do have any evidence that they actually do, they would only cause interference when they are actually active, which would only be in the setting of an inbound missile that is close enough to be influenced by the ship's EW system. That should almost never happen in the first place, and if it by chance does happen, then long range air surveillance would be the very last of your worries.
You seem to think that EW is something that is only active. There is also the passive element of EW which is meant to receive radars and other signals. Often this is how one ship detects the other the earliest by detecting their radar signals, which often comes to their search radar signals, the long band kind. Your own L-band blowing into these receivers won't help at all.
Wrong. First of all, there is no "time-sharing" with mechanical illuminators. None at all. The Aegis Mk 99 FCR is mechanical CWI (continuous wave illumination), which means the ESSM or SM-2 rides a continuous beam all the way in until impact. Only ESAs are agile enough to perform ICWI (interrupted CWI), and only high C-band (or higher) ESAs, since they need to have enough resolution to qualify as FCRs in the first place. Second, "time-sharing" (i.e. ICWI) only applies specifically to APAR, which first pioneered the technique, and probably to later ESAs like EMPAR, Sampson, and SPY-6 (the X-band portion); it is likely that 346A's C-band portion is also capable of ICWI. Earlier radars like the FCRs used on the Murasames and the Orekhs on the 054As, do not "time-share", if by that you mean ICWI.
Not true. ESSM and SM-2 can be datalinked during their midphase flight, and you only light the target during terminal phase. So while missiles 3 and 4 are on flight, missiles 1 and 2 are being served with a lighted target. When Missiles 1 and 2 are consumed, Missiles 3 and 4 are then served with a lighted target by the SPG-62, while Missiles 5 and 6 are now on flight and on their way, guided by datalink, the data coming from the SPY-1. That's Time sharing. Its not as cool as APAR though, since a PAR with digital forming beams can form any number of CWI beams to suit each missile in the air, allowing for more robust simultaneous engagement.
Riding a continuous beam, the problem with that your missile seeker is too far to pick up the target with a strong lock even when illuminated since the seeker is outside of the terminal catch basket.
And once more, Time Sharing isn't ICWI. Interrupted Continuous Wave Illumination is another subject entirely that is completely unrelated and has something to do with the continuous wave form. And that has been around for a long time.
I think it is ludicrous to believe that Chinese missile sensor technology of the 1990's is on par with Japanese missile sensor technology of the 1990's. This is such pure fantasy that even a hardcore PLA fanboi should be ashamed to claim this. Regardless, your assertion that certain PLAN ships are "strong" in ASuW is utterly surreal in the face of modern naval combat where advanced combat data systems that can track hundreds to thousands of targets simultaneously will simply laugh at the difference between one ship's 8 vs another ship's 16 missiles, or 180km range missiles vs 150km range missiles, or even supersonic vs subsonic missiles. These ships' missile complements may be "strong" against Royal Thai Navy ships, but against adversaries like the USN and JMSDF, and even RAN and ROCN ships, they are certainly not strong. Against modern navies you literally need a swarm of ASCMs, on the order of hundreds of simultaneously inbound missiles, attacking from multiple directions. Something that can only succeed with a coordinated launch by ships, subs, fighters, and shore-based batteries.
What makes you think that the sensor hasn't been upgraded ever since? Furthermore, the back end of it, including the CPU and the DSPs. Even older missiles are subject to upgrades, the guidance section being changed.
"Hundreds and thousands of targets?" If a radar displays this on a terminal and you have 30 seconds to determine what is the threat and to confirm it, you are in big trouble. Let's say, what if hundreds of those blips on the screen are the radar scatter from sea waves?
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