Like, as if one wonders what happens in PLAAF wargames. What happens if one Jian meets another Jian in mock air combat? Who will win?
Some of my hypothetical imaginings what goes on.
J-6 vs. J-7
Though the MiG-21/J-7 Fishbed was meant to replace the MiG-19/J-6 Farmer, this is one case where the successor isn't better than the former at least in WVR. The J-7 never fully replaced the vast numbers of J-6 during the entire career cycle of both planes.
Although the J-6 is considered a beast to fly, it is an incredible dogfighter. Under Chinese development, the combined output of its twin engines is even better than the single engine of the Fishbed and its thrust to weight ratio is as good as any late model Fishbed.
While the J-7 has better radar, it remains limited. Both planes will have to rely on ground control for situational awareness and engagements will be eyeball to eyeball. Against the J-6, the J-7 isn't necessarily a better fighter. The J-6 is a brute, it's fast, it's got a great turn rate and its got big guns. Its actual combat record has included aircraft considered more advanced among its kills.
The J-7 though, is a much more pleasant aircraft to fly. In the long run it was also more serviceable. The Communist bloc nations replaced their Farmers as as fast as they could when the Fishbed came out. Except in China where the Farmers as the J-6 continued to improve. By the eighties, the J-7 did began to see advantages that would pull it away from the J-6. These are avionics changes, such as the J-7 getting a HUD, a clean cockpit layout. Eventually the J-6 gets into trouble, when the J-7 evolved to get all aspect missiles such as the PL-8. The final end to the J-6 came when the J-7 finally gets a pulse doppler radar that gave the plane an all weather interception capability and a better ability to track a target during combat.
Some of my hypothetical imaginings what goes on.
J-6 vs. J-7
Though the MiG-21/J-7 Fishbed was meant to replace the MiG-19/J-6 Farmer, this is one case where the successor isn't better than the former at least in WVR. The J-7 never fully replaced the vast numbers of J-6 during the entire career cycle of both planes.
Although the J-6 is considered a beast to fly, it is an incredible dogfighter. Under Chinese development, the combined output of its twin engines is even better than the single engine of the Fishbed and its thrust to weight ratio is as good as any late model Fishbed.
While the J-7 has better radar, it remains limited. Both planes will have to rely on ground control for situational awareness and engagements will be eyeball to eyeball. Against the J-6, the J-7 isn't necessarily a better fighter. The J-6 is a brute, it's fast, it's got a great turn rate and its got big guns. Its actual combat record has included aircraft considered more advanced among its kills.
The J-7 though, is a much more pleasant aircraft to fly. In the long run it was also more serviceable. The Communist bloc nations replaced their Farmers as as fast as they could when the Fishbed came out. Except in China where the Farmers as the J-6 continued to improve. By the eighties, the J-7 did began to see advantages that would pull it away from the J-6. These are avionics changes, such as the J-7 getting a HUD, a clean cockpit layout. Eventually the J-6 gets into trouble, when the J-7 evolved to get all aspect missiles such as the PL-8. The final end to the J-6 came when the J-7 finally gets a pulse doppler radar that gave the plane an all weather interception capability and a better ability to track a target during combat.