Video: J-20 2002 August 14 Flight
[video]http://www.56.com/u58/v_NzExNDE0NDc.html#st=137&fromoutpvid=NzExNDE0NDc&[/video]
Video: J-20 2002 August 14 Flight
[video]http://www.56.com/u58/v_NzExNDE0NDc.html#st=137&fromoutpvid=NzExNDE0NDc&[/video]
according 2012,june (?) issue of Kanwa.phozotron claimed that China is offering to sale there T/R MMIC.the russian admit that the quality of Chinese T/R module is superior to the russian.
interesting news however it seems it is either untrue, or Russian outlets and Phazotron it self have not reported, but this type of information usually has reapples in russian news outlets
Phazotron does not report anything about it
So to be honest those news are difficult to authenticate, so it could be true but most likely are just a false rumour
Считаю необходимым особо подчеркнуть, что в сложных условиях корпорация продолжала успешно развиваться и достигла новых рубежей в науке и в области высоких инновационных технологий. Выдающийся успех конструкторов «Фазотрона» – создание современной бортовой радиолокационной станции «Жук-АЭ» с активной фазированной антенной решеткой (АФАР). По критерию эффективность/стоимость ему нет равных в России и в мире.
this is the closest written about an aesa, in the news section of phazotron it says nothing about being behind china
I have read that issue of Kanwa, Pinkov didnt say Russians admit they are lag behind China, he said:
1, The Chinese side claim their elecontric componets/hardware for AESA are superior to the Russian counterparts in terms of performance, power consumption, compactness and also cheaper to build, and they try to export these to Russians.
2, The Chinese side claim they are not interested in Su-35 because they dont rate Su-35 very highly.
Basciaally thats what Pinkov has written in that piece of news in that issue of Kanwa.
The two countries could really help each other. The Chinese got more money and more expertise in newer areas, the Russians have more experience and especially those preliminary groundwork done in the early 90s, which were "avant garde" at the time but now are the core of the 5th generation fighters.
It's not good to underestimate Chinese capabilities, there were a lot of money invested and clear evidences have showed their great improvements, but they cannot be seen as invincible in everything. China lacks a solid foundation compared to Russia. A lot of the technologies used in PAK-FA were already been researched and even maybe matured in the late 80s and early 90s. The collapse of the Soviet Union halted the progress and delayed the program for almost 2 decades.
On the other hand, Chinese advancement didn't really show until the late 90s and early 2000s. Most of them didn't even show until last few years. So far, there still haven't been anything groundbreaking in the aeronautical field, apart from the J-20 airframe. But the airframe can't really show much apart just being stealthy. We still have a lot to speculate in terms of engine, avionics, and radar.
The two sides should exchange technologies. Both have their advantages and disadvantages, the most important of all, both have competitor and potential enemy, USA. Right now both are going into dead loop. China seems to be struggling with engines, doesn't matter how much money and effort is poured into it, very little results seem to show (I know a lot of pro-China members will jump out shouting that China got WS-15, WS20, WS-XXXX and whatever, but for status quo, China is still buying engines from Russia). Russia has a lot of good technologies, but lack money to make them mature and commercialize. Even if they are mature technologies, the Russian air-force lack money to equip it.