If you're making a case for Russia and China cooperating in current and future projects by "trading notes" and complementing each other's strengths, e.g. J-20 with manufacturing, stealth and other more obvious and observable strengths over Su-57, and Sukhoi with aerodynamics, this may be a fruitful endeavor in theory but there are so many political barriers. Not sure what the article was suggesting about this having taken place and what exactly happened but I share the opinion that it is not something we will see because neither side stand to really gain all that much.
Su-57 is no doubt aerodynamically competent and innovative in some ways whereas J-20's is a little more conservative as far as we can tell. Comparing it to Typhoon and Rafale is not exactly fair since J-20 makes a stronger attempt at reducing radar signature and manages to be a fighter with internal bays which none of the Europeans have yet to do (not saying they couldn't). All moving stabilisers, long coupled canards with LERX, and positioning of stabilisers behind engine nozzles, are all things we don't see on Eurocanards either, or have ever seen on fighters except for all moving stabilisers from PAKFA prototypes. F-23 is quite a bit more aerodynamically "advanced" than F-22 on the surface as well. The USAF picked the F-22 for various reasons. One of them would have been reliability of proven designs and layouts. To conclude Chinese engineers are completely 100% incapable of achieving the aerodynamic advancements represented by technologies used on Su-57 either today or in years time, is definitely not something we can be sure of. Trading notes on one of your military's top pieces of strategic hardware is also something I doubt either party sees benefit in.
China's unfortunate culture of rushing for results through whatever means within a society that is ultra competitive and currently unscrupulous leads to this less than efficient competitiveness on the western level. I don't think this is revealing of future problems since we see trends of improvement and greater standards becoming enforced in all matters of politics and academics. Otherwise how would they have made the undeniably enormous progress they have in the last few decades? Quantum computing and communications, research in renewable energy sources (most patents and highest efficiencies in many fields such as solar), medical sciences, medical engineers, space technologies, IT, semiconductors, transport...... the list is actually endless and impressive for a country that only 30 years ago, did not have any of this or even the basic tools and infrastructure to pursue even one of these fields. It's easy and convenient to use the old excuse that Chinese just steal and copy foreign technologies. That is only a half truth. It ignores the fact that stealing technology is almost impossible and few cases have really been proven. It's not like anyone can just go about snooping on all sorts of technologies and then immediately be able to reverse engineer all of them. Copying and reverse engineering is extremely difficult and if it were easy, everyone would be doing it, yet so very few have proven to be capable of it. If Chinese scientific progress was as fake as some might like to think, not a shred of real progress could have been made. Yes China certainly benefited from Western and Soviet assistance in earlier days but much of the progress has been made on their own steam. To disregard this by writing academic research off as inefficient is too short sighted.
Su-57 is no doubt aerodynamically competent and innovative in some ways whereas J-20's is a little more conservative as far as we can tell. Comparing it to Typhoon and Rafale is not exactly fair since J-20 makes a stronger attempt at reducing radar signature and manages to be a fighter with internal bays which none of the Europeans have yet to do (not saying they couldn't). All moving stabilisers, long coupled canards with LERX, and positioning of stabilisers behind engine nozzles, are all things we don't see on Eurocanards either, or have ever seen on fighters except for all moving stabilisers from PAKFA prototypes. F-23 is quite a bit more aerodynamically "advanced" than F-22 on the surface as well. The USAF picked the F-22 for various reasons. One of them would have been reliability of proven designs and layouts. To conclude Chinese engineers are completely 100% incapable of achieving the aerodynamic advancements represented by technologies used on Su-57 either today or in years time, is definitely not something we can be sure of. Trading notes on one of your military's top pieces of strategic hardware is also something I doubt either party sees benefit in.
China's unfortunate culture of rushing for results through whatever means within a society that is ultra competitive and currently unscrupulous leads to this less than efficient competitiveness on the western level. I don't think this is revealing of future problems since we see trends of improvement and greater standards becoming enforced in all matters of politics and academics. Otherwise how would they have made the undeniably enormous progress they have in the last few decades? Quantum computing and communications, research in renewable energy sources (most patents and highest efficiencies in many fields such as solar), medical sciences, medical engineers, space technologies, IT, semiconductors, transport...... the list is actually endless and impressive for a country that only 30 years ago, did not have any of this or even the basic tools and infrastructure to pursue even one of these fields. It's easy and convenient to use the old excuse that Chinese just steal and copy foreign technologies. That is only a half truth. It ignores the fact that stealing technology is almost impossible and few cases have really been proven. It's not like anyone can just go about snooping on all sorts of technologies and then immediately be able to reverse engineer all of them. Copying and reverse engineering is extremely difficult and if it were easy, everyone would be doing it, yet so very few have proven to be capable of it. If Chinese scientific progress was as fake as some might like to think, not a shred of real progress could have been made. Yes China certainly benefited from Western and Soviet assistance in earlier days but much of the progress has been made on their own steam. To disregard this by writing academic research off as inefficient is too short sighted.
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