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Makes a lot of sense. J-10 is pretty much in the same class as the F-16, both have similar sizes and similar ordnance payload capacity. However, based on Col. Boyd's energy-maneuverability theory, the J-10 is a turn-based fighter like Gripen compared to F-16 being energy-based instead.J-10C might win Thailand’s new big fighter order
Posted on October 12, 2019 by buffalo — No Comments ↓
J-10C fighter
According to media out of China, the Royal Thai Air Force has proposed a new generation of fighter aircraft to replace the existing F-16A/B fighter, and China’s J-10C fighter is one of the potential candidates. If the bid is successful, J-10C fighter might witness the export of its first order.
According to Royal Thai Air Force, the current F-16A/B fighter jets were introduced in the late 1980s and has been in service for nearly 30 years.
The life span of a three-generation fighter is generally 30 calendar years. The Royal Thai Air Force upgraded the active F-16A/B fighter in 2010, it achieved the F-16MLU level and enhanced its combat capability. However, these fighters have entered a period of high failure and it has become more and more difficult to maintain their integrity rate, so the Royal Thai Air Force decided to introduce a new generation of fighters.
Now there are three of the most powerful competitors in the Royal Thai Air Force new fighter program, namely F-16V, JAS-39E/F and J-10CE fighters.
The Chinese J-10C fighter is a dark horse of the Royal Thai Air Force’s new generation fighter program. J-10C fighter is the latest improvement of China’s J-10 fighter.
It is equipped with a domestic WS-10B turbofan engine. The airborne fire control radar is upgraded to an active phased array radar. The cockpit is made of vitrified cockpit and the airborne weapon is medium and long. Air-to-air missiles and infrared imaging combat air-to-air missiles have the same overall combat capability as three generations of improved and three-generation-and-half fighters.
For export-oriented fighters, China is also open to airborne mission computers, allowing customers to access source code and integrate their own weapons and equipment.
There is also a relatively low price of domestic fighters. The price of the J-10C fighter is said to be only about half of JAS-39E/F fighters, which could be very attractive for Thailand.
https://www.china-arms.com/2019/10/j-10c-thailand-fighter-order/
Makes a lot of sense. J-10 is pretty much in the same class as the F-16, both have similar sizes and similar ordnance payload capacity. However, based on Col. Boyd's energy-maneuverability theory, the J-10 is a turn-based fighter like Gripen compared to F-16 being energy-based instead.
I'm interested to know whether Thailand will choose F-16V or J-10C, since politics plays a lot in weapons acquirement. It's also interesting to know J-10C is actually cheaper than Gripen E/F despite J-10C being a class above it. This might give J-10C a higher chance of being procured by Thailand though RTAF does operate Gripen C/D already so the chance of Gripen E/F is still possible.
I don't disagree with turn-based fighter jets having the ability to retain energy. The Flankers themselves are a great example since they're turn-based heavy fighters themselves and can still retain energy without bleeding too much of it during a tight turn (although energy from a supermaneuverable plane like the Flankers can be further bled if AoA limiters are off).J-10 maneuverbility is similar to Dassault Rafale. Both are canard delta wing, multirole fighter aircraft. No one said Rafale is not energy based fighter, right?
maneuverbility is a capability, do not conflict with energy.
F-16 was designed as a tight turning aircraft, however consider it first flew in 1974, while J-10 was flown in 1997, J-10 is similar to Gripen because both were designed in the same period.Makes a lot of sense. J-10 is pretty much in the same class as the F-16, both have similar sizes and similar ordnance payload capacity. However, based on Col. Boyd's energy-maneuverability theory, the J-10 is a turn-based fighter like Gripen compared to F-16 being energy-based instead.
I'm interested to know whether Thailand will choose F-16V or J-10C, since politics plays a lot in weapons acquirement. It's also interesting to know J-10C is actually cheaper than Gripen E/F despite J-10C being a class above it. This might give J-10C a higher chance of being procured by Thailand though RTAF does operate Gripen C/D already so the chance of Gripen E/F is still possible.
F-18 was designed as a turning fighter, however it was designed when the most manoeuvrable soviet fighter was MiG-21, its wing and highly swept LEX made it able to out turn Viggen and MiG-21.I don't disagree with turn-based fighter jets having the ability to retain energy. The Flankers themselves are a great example since they're turn-based heavy fighters themselves and can still retain energy without bleeding too much of it during a tight turn (although energy from a supermaneuverable plane like the Flankers can be further bled if AoA limiters are off).
However, what makes a turn-based fighter different from energy-based fighters is that during continuous maneuvers and turns, an aircraft such as the J-10 or Rafale bleeds energy quicker than energy-based fighters such as F-16 or F/A-18, but at the same time these turn-based fighters have higher maneuverability in return.
F-16 was designed as a tight turning aircraft, however consider it first flew in 1974, while J-10 was flown in 1997, J-10 is similar to Gripen because both were designed in the same period.
J-10 is similar to Gripen because the wing area and weight ratio are similar, heavier aircraft also sustain higher loads at the same G load number, Su-27 needs a much stronger structure to achieve the same G load number than F-16 or J-10 because it is larger and heavier.
To summarize, J-10 and F-16 are turning type fighters, but since J-10 is newer, weight reduction and aerodynamic enhancements makes it a bit better at ITR, but both are turning aircraft, however F-16 has excellent thrust in the latest versions nevertheless it is used to increase warload to carry more fuel and weapons.
F-18 was designed as a turning fighter, however it was designed when the most manoeuvrable soviet fighter was MiG-21, its wing and highly swept LEX made it able to out turn Viggen and MiG-21.
The F-16 is still an aircraft with the avionics and weapons to match any thing you have in J-10 or MiG-29.
the J-10 if purchased by any nation is due to geopolitics and in the case of China domestic production, but both aircraft have areas of superiority and disadvantages with respect each other
The Hornet is a pretty manoeuvrable aircraft, what you are trying to say is delta canards achieve a high ITR because of the configuration it self, which is not true, the J-10 is pretty agile because it has a larger wing than F-16 thus it has a lower wing loading, AJ-37 is also a delta canard and it will not out manoeuvre even a MiG-23. much less a MiG-29. The F-16XL had a huge wing, so huge it could outmanoeuvre the original F-16A in ITR, pretty much it was as good as the Lavi or J-10 and it was tailless.I would disagree with the F-16 being a turn-based fighter if we're talking about the production variants. The YF-16 itself did indeed prove to being a turn-based fighter during flyoffs against the YF-17, but the production F-16s have increased weight because of avionics and ordnance. CFT-equipped F-16s are the ones who are basically far away from the Fighting Falcon's original design of being a pure turn-based dogfighter.
I would also disagree with the F/A-18 being a turn-based fighter. The YF-17 itself was outmaneuvered by its YF-16 competitor. The F/A-18C/D is slightly larger and heavier than YF-17, however both Hornets and Fighting Falcons are still maneuverable but not turn-based fighters.
The Hornet is a pretty manoeuvrable aircraft, what you are trying to say is delta canards achieve a high ITR because of the configuration it self, which is not true, the J-10 is pretty agile because it has a larger wing than F-16 thus it has a lower wing loading, AJ-37 is also a delta canard and it will not out manoeuvre even a MiG-23. much less a MiG-29. The F-16XL had a huge wing, so huge it could outmanoeuvre the original F-16A in ITR, pretty much it was as good as the Lavi or J-10 and it was tailless.
However to understand why you have F-16s with such configuration you have to see 2 details, first with HMS and AIM-9X the small difference in ITR the J-10 has with F-16 does not matter except in battles without missiles.
The other factor is the strike mission, the F-16 with AIM-9X will allow heavier wing loading and higher attack capability at the same price keeping the same manufacturing tooling and basic model, reducing redesign the airframe and without even using thrust vectoring.
the F-18 is the same, it carries a large amount of weapons, takes off from a carrier, with AIM-9X will render even Su-35 useless, Thrust vectoring is only in reality good at supercruise or if you are fighting against aircraft without HMSs and aircraft armed with Air to Air missiles like AIM-9Ls, AA-8s or earlier type of missiles.
J-10C is a very capable machine, no doubt about it, but is basically as capable as MiG-35 or F-16V, and only superior to MiG-29A or F-16s without AESAs, pretty much it does not offer anything superior to these old cold war veterans, Rafale and Eurofighter offer supercruise capability, which is superior to all these fighters, but still well is low supercruise speeds, so they are not so different to MiG-35, F-16V or J-10C, but still enjoy some slight advantages
This proves you an F-16XL more or less was as capable as a Lavi or J-10 in ITR