China's transport, tanker & heavy lift aircraft

Deino

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Jovian

Junior Member
with the advent of more powerful CJ-2000 ,possible of a extended fuselage or sligtly enlarge Y-20 may be in drawing board.

Hi Hardware,

Do you mean CJ-1000A (not CJ-2000, ie. typo)? If not, please let us know if there is another engine under development.

Thanks in advance!

PS. since the J-15 landing on the Liaoning, the development of the Y-20 is the most interesting news from China (for me anyway). Always hungry for more info!
 

hardware

Banned Idiot
Hi Hardware,

Do you mean CJ-1000A (not CJ-2000, ie. typo)? If not, please let us know if there is another engine under development.

Thanks in advance!

PS. since the J-15 landing on the Liaoning, the development of the Y-20 is the most interesting news from China (for me anyway). Always hungry for more info!
it's CJ-1000A,thank's for pointing that out.
 

Franklin

Captain
Someone needs to put a axe to this guy. Our favorite incognoscenti on Chinese military matters or on military matters in general has spoken about the Y-20.

China’s Giant Transport Plane Takes Flight

The Chinese military’s first homegrown long-range transport plane has flown for the first time, extending Beijing’s impressive record of new warplane development.

But the Xian Y-20 (“Y” for Yun, meaning “transport”), roughly in the same class as the U.S. C-17 or the Russian Il-76, is probably still a long way from being fully operational — to say nothing of it being militarily effective. A lack of custom engines limits the new plane’s potential.

State-owned China Central Television depicted the four-engine jet transport taking off from what was probably the military airfield in Yanliang, central China, home of the People’s Liberation Army Air Force testing establishment. The Y-20, still wearing only its yellow primer paint, flew what appeared to be a short test flight and landed in front of a crowd waving Chinese flags. It seems the transport’s landing gear stayed down for the entire sortie — a standard precaution in early tests of new planes.

“The successful maiden flight of Yun-20 is significant in promoting China’s economic and national defense buildup as well as bettering its emergency handling such as disaster relief and humanitarian aid,” the government-run Xinhua news service announced Saturday.

Development of the new transport began no later than 2005, and was possibly spurred in part by the massive earthquake that killed tens of thousands in Sichuan in 2008. In the disaster’s aftermath, the PLAAF — which has long favored jet fighters over more mundane support aircraft — was able to deploy only a handful of small cargo planes carrying relief supplies. The U.S., by contrast, sent in two Boeing C-17s — welcome assistance but also embarrassing for the Chinese Communist Party.

The Y-20 is the latest in a chain of new Chinese airplanes. Since late 2010 Beijing has debuted two stealth fighter prototypes; a new carrier-based naval fighter; plus radar and patrol planes, two gunship helicopters and, now, a heavyweight cargo plane at least as capacious as Russia’s workhorse Il-76, which China also possesses and which seems to provide the basis of the Y-20′s design. Beijing may also have acquired some of the C-17′s blueprints from a spy working at Boeing.

The Y-20 first appeared in blurry snapshots posted to Party-friendly Chinese Internet forums in December — Beijing’s standard procedure for rolling out major new prototype weapons. A series of overhead images provided by U.S. commercial satellite operator GeoEye in early January provided more detail. In contrast to the high degree of official secrecy surrounding other new warplanes, Beijing promptly announced the Y-20′s existence — a move that trade magazine Flightglobal called “remarkable.”

As with China’s other new warplanes, the Y-20 prototype is apparently fitted with older, Russian-made engines rather than purpose-designed motors. A lack of suitable powerplants has slowed progress on many of the new planes. The Y-20′s current D-30 engines are low-bypass models better suited for supersonic fighters than an efficient, slow-flying cargo hauler. Beijing has poured billions of dollars into developing new engines but so far has little to show for it.

“The giant aircraft will continue to undergo experiments and test flights as scheduled,” Xinhua said of the Y-20. But that doesn’t mean the new transport is close to being ready for frontline use.

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My favorite quote from the article.

The Y-20′s current D-30 engines are low-bypass models better suited for supersonic fighters than an efficient, slow-flying cargo hauler.

Why does this guy still have a job ?
 
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kroko

Senior Member
Someone needs to put a axe to this guy. Our favorite incognoscenti on Chinese military matters or on military matters in general has spoken about the Y-20.



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Franklin, you and others should learn to ignore this kind of articles. You cant shut it up. Why do you waste time going to that site? Ignore it man.
 

no_name

Colonel
....says who ???:confused:

Just the following snippet on cjdby:

中国航天报

【桂林航天公司:高品质保驾运-20成功首飞】

1月26日,我国运-20重型运输机成功首飞,该机配置了桂林航天公司研制的8个型号继电器,分别应用于智能配电管理、飞行姿态控制、座舱自动弹射 、仪器仪表工作等系统,航天元器件的高可靠性受到用户一致好评

However the guy did not provide a link, and I cannot find anything on the web.

Btw some bashers says the Y-20 don't have cargo door... reminds me of the J-20 don't have weapons bay thing again.
 
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