Another example about taking advantage of the lack of publicity.
J-20 according to many Russian military observers and enthusiasts, is just a cheap copy of a Mig-1.44. Despite the glaringly obvious evidence against that claim. I don't think it's about being recognised. There's still a slight emphasis on Deng's whole bide your time, hide your strength mantra in today's Chinese leadership. However they are seemingly more open and showy these days because there's money to be made in exports for one thing and it's good to gradually improve your image from low quality equipment and copies to decent stuff. That can't happen overnight. Another important consideration for them is improving military image deters drama from occurring nearby. Strength is a good deterrent of violence. Another thing is if Chinese equipment image is gradually improved over time to reflect their actual quality these days, it helps with all Chinese exports and overall economy. That is exactly why western powers and Russia is so willing and desperate to undermine this whenever it suits them. Russia wants to preserve their market and what better way than badmouthing the competition. Only western powers ever say anything "positive" about Chinese military abilities and when they do, it's to incite fear and justify increased budgets.
I think you are confusing this image (that of a J-10C) with the J-10B image. J-10B, which uses a PESA radar, has an elevated ridge in the center.
No, I think Deino is aware of the difference between the two radars, *but* as I’ve mentioned before (a few years back actually), the information surrounding these two radars makes their identities quite confusing. Recall that when the image of the radar with the IFF dipoles was released we had a study referring to it as an AESA, and when the image of the radar without the IFF dipoles was released we were still trying to tease apart the difference between the J-10B and J-10C, and many thought that J-10 in that image was a B and not a C, so the radar must have been the PESA that people said the J-10B was using. In a vacuum without that particular history of information surrounding these two images and knowing what we know now about the J-10’s radar history, it would be natural to conclude the radar with the IFF dipoles was a PESA, and the radar without it was an AESA, but if we’re to trust our own methods for parsing information then those methods would suggest very contradictory, and thus inconclusive, things about the identities of those two radars.I think you are confusing this image (that of a J-10C) with the J-10B image. J-10B, which uses a PESA radar, has an elevated ridge in the center.
Not really. We’ve never seen IFFs on PESAs either. Just because you *could* program an AESA with software to function as an IFF doesn’t mean all ESAs that don’t are PESAs. There are examples of AESA mounted fighters that have independent IFF antennas.Those are IFF dipoles, which an AESA radar could replace by software modes. I remember having fervent arguments with people here and elsewhere that it's PESA, not AESA. I'm glad to see the debate has been resolved.
I'm as always alarmed by the xenophobia on these forums, but I'll point out that the Russians have a strong incentive to be dishonest. They are, after all, the masters of disinformation, and they have a vested interest in claiming that the Su-57 is better than the J-20 and that the Su-35S has a uniform superiority over any Chinese Flanker-derivatives. The Russian claims shouldn't be treated as delusional, but dshonest, in the same way you shouldn't treat American claims about Chinese capabilities as delusional, but dishonest.
歼10B飞机上,14所为其研制了某型新体制机载火控雷达。这是14所紧跟世界潮流,在机载火控雷达技术领域取得又一次跨越,实现了新体制机载火控雷达在我军战机的首次列装。这种新体制雷达技术复杂性和技术难度显著提高,具备更强的目标探测能力,探测威力/跟踪精度及稳定性在同类轻型歼击机中处于领先水平,具备较强的抗干扰能力,能够同时进行多目标攻击。
歼10C飞机上,14所为其研制的新体制机载火控雷达在技术上更进一步。该型雷达的研制全面继承了同期最新科研成果,各项性能指标优于国际同期产品,创下新体制雷达首次列装部队的又一个第一。值得一提的是,该型雷达以零故障通过严酷的可靠性鉴定试验,充分展示了14所优异的雷达研发水平、批量生产能力和全寿命周期保障能力。