All images are high-resolution.
Belly bay:
Side bay (empty) with pylon deployed:
Another family photo:
One for each day of the week:
All images are high-resolution.
Belly bay:
Side bay (empty) with pylon deployed:
Another family photo:
One for each day of the week:
Special interview with a J-20 pilot who participated in the National Day flyby starting at 13:50.
Key takeaways:
1. The most difficult part of the flyby was maintaining aircraft position within the formation.
2. The J-20 is highly maneuverable and uses a side stick controller, which is highly receptive to user input. This is actually a disadvantage for formation flying.
3. They spent three months practicing for the 3 second flyby for National Day.
4. Since the J-20 uses stealth coating (which is very expensive), they didn't draw a reference line on the aircraft body for the purpose of the flyby.
5. Standards for selecting J-20 pilots are very strict and they must be able to withstand +9g/-3g.
I’ll bite. The Su-27 is 16 tons and can pull 9Gs. The only myth here is the sophistry that you need to weigh as much an F-22 to handle that many Gs. Clearly when we had this debate you weren’t reading anything I said. Next time I’d appreciate it if you don’t do flippant snipes with distorted versions of people’s arguments., as well as the 15T myth that the J-20 wasn't built up to the full 9G heavy fighter standard.
His very specific +9G, -3G standard for pilot candidates should lay both of those myths to rest, at least here on SDF.
actually no.I believe every electronic fly by wire system on a modern fighter since the F-16 has employed a side stick controller, which is indeed far more sensitive to control input than the F-15s central floor mounted joy stick. While the F-15s boosted stick does provide more "real feel", they do try to build some feel into the side stick controller.