Wingman said:Hey Crobato, do you have pics of the Chinese Su-27SK cockpit? I don't think I've ever seen the L006 before. Does it tell the specific type of the threat? Instead of the category, e.g. does it tell you it's an F-15 instead of "fighter" like on the old Su-27 RWRs? Also, does it show all threats simultaneously as opposed to one at a time? Does it give range estimates?
I know the J-11 cockpit looks much cleaner, but I readthat only one of the screens is an MFD, the other is an extended display
Also, the author never said it doesn't have an HUD. He said it doesn't have an HSD (if that's what 空情显示系统 translates to)
Su-27 does have a steam gauge style HSD but not the modern LCD styles like on most Western fighters. It has a nav system but I'm talking about the HSD that displays enemy SAM range circles, bogeys detected by your allies and datalinked to you (though that's displayed on radar screen), waypoints, territories, etc.
You can see it in this cockpit.
Right side of the dashboard. Trace a line between the pilot's nose to his wrist. See the elongated pilot square? That is a pretty standard L006 Beryoza.
An RWR cannot tell you if it is an F-15 or an F-16, unless it happens to know the specific frequency attached to a particular fighter. Given that radars are continually being upgraded, the frequencies of an F-15A will be different from an F-15E.
The RWR can at least tell you that it is a fighter, a SAM unit, a long frequency radar search unit, or even a ship, that is scanning you. It can tell you what mode the radar is on to you, whether it has just found you or is already locking on to you. It can tell you bearing, and from intensity, the rough distance though it is up for the pilot to make a guesstimate based on the intensity. It can tell you if a missile has gone live and has locked on to you. And yes, it will show you all threats simultaneously, though the most threatening one will tell you the most loudly.
To say that the RWR can only detect threats 90 degrees is just plain wrong. He is correct that that the RWR works in bearings of 20 degrees, but it goes full circle. The lights are arranged in a circle around an outline of a plane, with each light set at 20 degrees of each other. If you have two lights going off right next to each other, the threat indicator showing one radar, this indicates that the radar illuminating you is between the two lights. In effect, it is working in bearings of 10 degrees. One light for every 20 degrees, and two lights for anything in between.
You can learn to play with this intuitively with a flight sim like Lock-On. Actually you will find that it is pretty cool. Along with the other features like HMS, using your IRST, etc,.