From Day One, you have been badmouthing the J-20 Mighty Dragon and playing up the Pak-Fa/T-50.
Bunk...From day one, I have been advocating caution about making assumptions. Doubt is an important component of critical thinking skills. Something obviously the J-20 fanboys lack.
Expert analysis by Australia Air Power's Mr. Peter Goon has contradicted your misinformation and shown you to be a fraud. It's time to give up your charade.
I think everyone on this forum is getting tired of the misinformation spread by you and PtldM3 and your ridiculous excuses. The lack of analyzing backscatter is due to a limitation of available information, not a flaw in their analysis.
All planes have backscatter. Using common sense, we would expect the backscatter to be minor and not affect the overall standing of the world's three premier stealth fighters.
1. F-22
2. J-20
3. F-35
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Here is the bottom line from Australia Air Power's expert, Mr. Peter Goon:
"Engineers and Scientists who work in ‘stealth’ (AKA ‘Low Observable’
designs have a way for explaining it to lay people:
‘Stealth’ is achieved by Shaping, Shaping, Shaping and Materials (Denys Overholser).
The F-22A is clearly well shaped for low observability above about 500 MHz, and from all important aspects.
The J-20 has observed the ‘Shaping, Shaping, Shaping’ imperative, except for the axisymmetric nozzles, and some curvature of the sides that smears a strong, but very narrow specular return into something of a more observable fan.
The X-35 mostly observed the ‘Shaping, Shaping, Shaping’ rule, but since then, to quote a colleague, ‘hideous lumps, bumps, humps and warts’ have appeared on the JSF to disrupt the shaping imperative, forcing excessive reliance on materials, which are at the rear-end of the path to ‘Low Observability’.
While discussing ‘rear-ends’, both the F-35 and the J-20 have large signature contributions from their jet nozzles. However, the difference is much like the proverbial ‘Ham Omelette’: the F-35 Pig is committed, but the J-20 Chicken is a participant.
If the Chinese decide that rear sector Low Observability is tactically and strategically important, they are at the design stage where they can copy the F-22A nozzle design for the production configuration of the J-20."
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Try reading the complete paragraphs on backscatter:
I have done more than just read the complete paragraphs. I posted them and what I said is true: That the authors hope that production models will 'mitigate' or correct the flaws in their guesswork. While reasonable, it is absurd to expect us to take as gospel what is guessed in their work.
Here are the main points:
What the Simulation Does Not Demonstrate
1- The simulator at this time
does not model backscatter from edge diffraction effects, although the resulting error will be mitigated by the reality that in a mature production design these RCS contributions are reduced by edge treatments;
2- The simulator at this time
does not model backscatter from surface travelling wave effects. In the forward and aft hemispheres these can be dominant scattering sources where specular contributions are low. The magnitude of these RCS contributions is reduced by edge treatments, lossy surface coatings, gap treatments, and panel serrations;
3- The simulator at this time
does not model backscatter from the AESA bay in the passband of a bandpass radome, due to the absence of any data on the intended design of same, the resulting error will be mitigated by the reality that in a mature production design much effort will be expended in suppressing passband RCS contributions;
4- The simulator at this time
does not model backscatter from the engine inlet tunnels or engine exhaust tailpipes, due to the absence of any data on the intended design of same. In the forward and aft hemispheres these can be dominant scattering sources where specular contributions are low. The magnitude of these RCS contributions is reduced by suppressing these RCS contributions with absorbers, and in the case of inlet tunnels, by introducing a serpentine geometry to increase the number of bounces;
5- The simulator at this time
does not model structural mode RCS contributions from antenna and EO apertures, panel joins, panel and door gaps, fasteners and other minor contributors; although the resulting error will be mitigated by the reality that in a mature production design these RCS contributions are reduced by RCS reduction treatments.
You are expecting us to take seriously a 'preliminary assessment' that
DOES NOT contain data of the major causes of radiation coming off a body? Look at the highlighted and look at the illustration and see the obvious flaws.
The modeling software becomes less accurate on point #6. However, it is a far better estimate than someone pulling a number or conclusion out of thin air (like you know who). The modeling is still very useful, because an "underestimate backscatter in nulls" applies to all planes modeled.
Yes...The data on reflection is most accurate when the angle of incident is
NORMAL.
6- The PO computational algorithm performs most accurately at broadside or near normal angles of incidence, with decreasing accuracy at increasingly shallow angles of incidence, reflecting the limitions of PO modelling.
The only time we can have that data is when the body is completely
STATIONARY. Show me how does the J-20 remain stationary in mid-air so we can measure it under 'real world' environment conditions.
When has the United States permitted independent third-party up-close testing of the F-22? However, that absurd requirement does not prevent me from agreeing that the F-22 is the current gold standard and superior to the J-20 in two important respects (e.g. J-20's minor side-curvature design flaw and round engine nozzles).
I suggest everyone ignore Gambit's absurd demand and acknowledge that the best available information and modeling clearly show the J-20 is currently inferior to the F-22, but superior to the F-35.
Your suggestion relevant only for the Chinese members here who have put on their nationalistic blinders, not those who are willing to exercise critical thinking skills. I have no problems with APA's clearly stated 'preliminary assessment' with its flaws. But those who are willing to exercise critical thinking skills will have a problem with you demanding that they give such wide latitude for China.