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AL-31FP, of course !!!
Surely not !
THE FP is a special Indian-MKI-taylored version ... can't think the Russians would sell this version to China too. However my point was that all AL-31's share the same or at least very similar internal features ...
The J-20's nozzles are too short to be a thrust vectoring engine.
AL-31F M2 is impossible because the gearbox is in the wrong location.
I'm well aware the black engines 'look' like the AL-31FN.
But looks don't tell the entire story.
The J-11D looks like a Flanker.
The H-6K looks like the Tu-16.
The J-10C looks like the Lavi.
New Recruit
To get back to a prior discussion :
View attachment 279869
I don't remember who said the J-20 was a MiG 1.44 extrapolation when in fact it resembles most
a stealthy evolution of the 31.
View attachment 279870
View attachment 279871
Bigger wing with swept aligned rear edge, corrections to the landing gear positioning,
awesome intake re-design job, twin vertical tails and canards added, etc.
Just like with the J-31, at some point, if your copy improves on everything from the original,
it's just not a copy anymore; is it?
As a long-range bomber interceptor with stealth, this bird has potential ... and it's rather pretty!
Good day all, Tay.
Holly s*** damn that look awesomeThe engine mystery continues. Why are the nozzles black and now painted silver?
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It is highly unlikely that you can deduce technological origin based on mere eye-balling of such scarce, if not none, similarity between these two aircrafts.
New Recruit
Actually, one can! Not necessarily anyone as the you in your sentence implies
and pf course, applying knowledge of a domain and its tools ( schematics, etc ).
There are such family ties in aircraft design. The Rafale's a clear follow-through
from the Mirage 2000 even if pushed so far that an untrained eye won't register it.
Fan of both, it always strikes me as evident?
Over 40 years, thousands of images with live access and decent understanding,
one ends up able to shape an informed opinion.
I can't guess the RCS however! Good evening, Tay.
With whatever evidence and analysis you have provided, it remains highly dubious of what you are claiming. If you insist on your opinion, you can certainly provide solid evidence and fact-based logic behind your conclusion (aka "applying knowledge of a domain and its tools", are you familiar with aerodynamics, CFD, avionics or any professional subject that even remotely relates to fighter aircraft design??), so as to back up your claim. I'm a PhD in a similar field, I do aerodynamic/hydrodynamic numerical modeling and design optimization, yet NO ONE in my field who is knowledgeable ever dare to claim that they know the performance and technological origin of a specific design by mere eyeballing. Now if you are a well trained PhD, I just might put a little bit of credibility in you.
Unfortunately, what you have claimed is totally wrong, the design of J-20 has nothing to do with a Mig-31. They do not share any similarity in terms of aerodynamics and virtually every other aspect, other that those features that serves a common purpose, such as making sure that the aircraft can fly, and optimization for high speed. Basically, with the highly non-linear and chaotic turbulence features in aerodynamics, outcome of any difference in aerodynamic design is hardly estimated with bare eyes, you need a wind tunnel and advanced compressible N-S equation-solving CFD tools to get an understanding about a specific design, then you move on to work on the FBW controls.
New Recruit
Even for low Mach numbers, sometimes compressible flow still has to be considered. In fact, in one of my projects, I use compressible models for an air chamber with velocity as low as 10cm/s, because I need to consider the phase difference between the motion of the liquid phase and the air. I use incompressible models for liquid phase only. Sometimes compressible model gets way too time-consuming, that's when I have to use incompressible models for high Reynolds number air flow.Respect! One question, why only compressible. If one wants to test for ranges <M 0.3, I believe an incompressible model would be required also?
In addition, then there is the transition zone or trans sonic region if you will, where turbulent flow really don't get represented well by the compressible model. What assumptions to the model would you add to this region?