J-10 Thread III (Closed to posting)

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dingyibvs

Senior Member
I was just sifting through some old pics of the J-10B and noticed something. J-10A and most J-10B prototypes seem to have engine nozzles looking like this:
129388003088940.jpg


That is, a ring of blueish metal followed by brownish colored nacelles. However, on this particular J-10B which is painted gray, the engine nozzles look to have a ring of brownish metal followed by blueish colored nacelles:

j10bj.jpg


Anybody know why that is? Could the gray, unnumbered J-10B be using the WS-10A?
 

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
I was just sifting through some old pics of the J-10B and noticed something. J-10A and most J-10B prototypes seem to have engine nozzles looking like this:
129388003088940.jpg


That is, a ring of blueish metal followed by brownish colored nacelles. However, on this particular J-10B which is painted gray, the engine nozzles look to have a ring of brownish metal followed by blueish colored nacelles:

j10bj.jpg


Anybody know why that is? Could the gray, unnumbered J-10B be using the WS-10A?

No. That's just Al-31. No variant of J-10 currently employs the WS-10A.
 

Centrist

Junior Member
I was just sifting through some old pics of the J-10B and noticed something. J-10A and most J-10B prototypes seem to have engine nozzles looking like this:
129388003088940.jpg


That is, a ring of blueish metal followed by brownish colored nacelles. However, on this particular J-10B which is painted gray, the engine nozzles look to have a ring of brownish metal followed by blueish colored nacelles:

j10bj.jpg


Anybody know why that is? Could the gray, unnumbered J-10B be using the WS-10A?

I don't think that it is WS-10a, but you have a point. The difference in the color is probably due to lighting differences, IMO. But with Chinese engines, just about anything can be true.
 

Centrist

Junior Member
I see what you mean, I made a photoshop comparison but I cannot for the life of me figure out how to post it. I cannot delete the old photos that I have posted.

Edit: I put my photo on Flickr.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


The photo on the left is a newer photo of the J-10B, so is the photo on the right, but I superimposed another image of the engine nozzle from an older photo of the J-10B.

Also, it seems that all of the new photos of the J-10B have this different nozzle, either because the lighting was the same for the last batch, or because there is something different about the engine itself.
 
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Martian

Senior Member
Four easy steps to posting a picture

I see what you mean, I made a photoshop comparison but I cannot for the life of me figure out how to post it. I cannot delete the old photos that I have posted.

Edit: I put my photo on Flickr.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


The photo on the left is a newer photo of the J-10B, so is the photo on the right, but I superimposed another image of the engine nozzle from an older photo of the J-10B.

Also, it seems that all of the new photos of the J-10B have this different nozzle, either because the lighting was the same for the last batch, or because there is something different about the engine itself.

1. Go to a free hosting service (i.e. imgur.com, imageshack.com, photobucket.com, or tinypic.com). Personally, I prefer IMGUR.com. Anyway, type "IMGUR.com" to go to their home page. There is no sign-up required.

2. Click on "browse" button.

3. Select picture to upload from your computer onto the hosting service.

4. Copy and then Paste url link to your picture for "message boards" on IMGUR.com. The procedure is similar on Imageshack. I've used both and IMGUR.com is a lot faster and easier.

Good luck. If you have any questions, just leave a message here.
 

duskylim

Junior Member
VIP Professional
Re: Four easy steps to posting a picture

I have a feeling that what is keeping the J-10B from being mass-produced is indeed the engine issue. Until the locally-made and certified indigenous engine is available in quantity Chengdu and the PLAAF are holding back on production of the B model.

The fact that they are equipping the J-11B/BS?/BH? with the domestic engine means the PLAAF is already confident and satisfied with its performance in a twin-engine installation.

Clearly some reliability issues must be resolved before the modified version can be installed into the single-engined J-10B.

This also seems to be what is keeping production of the J-10A low, as the PLAAF doesn't really want the older model anymore and is making CAC keep to a low-rate production of the A until the B model can be mass-produced.

Only in cases where airframe and maintainability issues compel the PLAAF to replace the aircraft are the J-10A's being inducted into the units.

This would mean that the PLAAF actually wants the J-10B to be the mass-produced and most numerous J-10 model.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Four easy steps to posting a picture

Found this J-10 video..has a quick Top Gun clip at about 1:10 to 1:13..
[video=youtube;5NVOXUWGEuo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NVOXUWGEuo&feature=player_embedded#[/video]
 

vesicles

Colonel
Re: Four easy steps to posting a picture

Found this J-10 video..has a quick Top Gun clip at about 1:10 to 1:13..
[video=youtube;5NVOXUWGEuo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NVOXUWGEuo&feature=player_embedded#[/video]

At 1:10 when the plane fires the missile, it's definitely a J-10, but the plane getting blown to pieces definitely looks like one of the "enemy" planes in Top Gun (The fictional Mig. 28 in the movie?).

Looking at the plane firing a missile, I noticed how much smoke the missile is generating. Is this normal to have smoke this thick? I mean it's almost completely blocking the plane. I think the missiles fired by F-15/16/18's have much thinner smoke...
 

SteelBird

Colonel
Looking the pilots when being interviewed. Apparently, they are reading a script rather than speaking their personal view point. Maybe this is just a special Chinese characteristic.
 
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