Engineer
Major
That point is a rebuttal to the argument that deflection hurts RCS. Please read it again, as I even have the word "deflection" in my reply.On the first point, you originally brought up that point to refute that canards were not inherently detrimental to stealth. That is a good point, but canards not being detrimental to stealth does not mean deflections are not detrimental to stealth. Canard deflections are as detrimental to stealth as any other form of control surface deflections.
On the second point, you haven't really refuted the supersonic maneuverability claim. The crutch of that claim is the notion that control surface deflections (canards, tail planes, etc) induce greater drag penalties at supersonic speeds than vectored nozzles. You're either going to have to show me that control surface deflections don't induce so much drag that they make TVC favourable, or else show me that whatever the net benefits/costs of TVC, taking the drag penalties for surface deflections at supersonic speeds is still the better option.
I already did. See points #2 and #4 on post #4189. Hence I said what I have said in my previous two posts.
Another argument going against TVC on the J-20 is that TVN will require lengthy testing which will delay the entry date of the aircraft. This is because TVC is an unproven technology for China with no known flying hours on a technology demonstrator. People who do not like J-20 would obviously be happy to see such a delay, but not so for PLAAF who wants to deploy the aircraft on 2017 if possible. If you optimistically assume WS-15 becomes available on 2015 and only requires two years to complete tests on the J-20, then PLAAF's expectation could barely be met. There is little reason to make things more complicate with untested technologies and delay the delivery date by years.