It will be a disappointment if this carrier is just a copy of the Admiral Kuznetsov class. I certainly hope that they will have brought changes and improvements to the design. Like a wider flight deck bigger hangar deck and a smaller island structure at the least. A catapult on the angled deck will be a huge bonus.
I don't think 001A will be a direct carbon copy by any means but it will follow the same overall configuration.
I speculate it may feature a slightly larger flight deck, smaller island, different weapons elevators, and possibly even larger main aircraft elevators... not to mention countless internal modifications as well of course.
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That is at this point still possible. But has anyone seen any clear evidence of a catapult program in China ? Steam or EMALS a like ?
We have had direct statements from Rear Admiral Ma Weiming directly mentioning the EM cat project, and he's also the head or a part of a variety of other developments including IEPS and railgun development.
Beyond that we've also had a number of very consistent rumours regarding EM cat development over the years, and even a few speculated sites that may be for testing catapults...
And of course, the naval air facility at huangdiancun appears to be undergoing installation of something which looks suspiciously like a pair of catapults...
We have less information on Chinese steam catapult development but it is regarded as something which generally exists, and is even thought to be the slightly more likely catapult to be placled aboard the 002 CATOBAR.
So the question is whether they'll end up placing a EM cat or steam cat on 002.
A full CATOBAR carrier would mean that they have to retrain their pilots and deck crew. And maybe even redesign the plane.
Yes, any CATOBAR carrier will require a new J-15 variant... and a catapult compatible J-15 is accepted to be under development.
I don't think pilots and deck crew will have to undergo too much additional training, because the significant difference between a CATOBAR and STOBAR carrier is simply the launch itself, where the pilot and deck crew simply need to learn how to take off from a catapult. It's a small additional "skill" to learn for both sides of the launch.
Of course, the deck crew and technicians must also learn to maintain the catapult as well, but that's a somewhat separate task.
A STOBAR/CATOBAR combo is at the same time progress and playing it safe. If they have issues with the deck crew or pilots or plane. Then the carrier doesn't have to sit idle for long periods of time and instead just operate it like a STOBAR carrier as they have trained and working to fix the problems at the same time.
I suspect that when the Chinese Navy does install catapults onto its first carrier (most likely 002), it will be at a stage where they have already thoroughly tested the catapult on land, and conducted a large number of test launches with various aircraft under all manner of conditions as well.
If, in the unlikely situation that 001A is fitted with a catapult on its waist, then I would expect the catapult to be there as a test to see how well it functions under true maritime conditions aboard a carrier, but that the ship itself will not conduct standard operations with the catapult (at least not early on in its career).